Date: 10 May 2026
Nonstop blooms
🌸 Nonstop blooms
🌸 Compact size, big impact
🌸 Surprisingly low maintenance
🌸 A Southern landscape favorite
For Southern gardeners looking for reliable color without constant fuss, Peregrina has quietly become one of those "plant it and enjoy it" landscape favorites.
🛒 Plant and enjoy the compact everblooming Peregrina
📚 Learn more:
Date: 10 May 2026
Happy Mothers Day!
❤️ Happy Mothers Day!
😴 "Go to sleep, and perhaps in your dreams you will find the answer." - Lewis Carroll
🐈📸 Cat Josephine is guarding her children's sleep: Pilemon, Sushi, Loki - at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden.
#PeopleCats #Quotes
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Date: 10 May 2026
🍑 From the Garden: Why I Always Recommend Growing Your Own Peaches
by Tatiana Anderson, Top Tropicals Garden Expert
I'll be honest with you. The first time I bit into a peach straight off the tree, still warm from the afternoon sun, I understood why people get obsessed with this fruit. There is no comparison to what you find in a grocery store. Store peaches are picked hard, shipped cold, and by the time they reach you, something important is already gone. A tree-ripened peach is soft, fragrant, juicy, and sweet in a way store peaches rarely are. Eat it fresh, slice it into a cobbler, throw it on the grill - it holds up beautifully either way.
So let's talk about how to actually get there.
Planting
Peaches are not difficult. Give them sun, drainage, and room for air movement, and they will usually tell you very quickly that they are happy.
- Full sun is essential - 8 hours minimum, and more is better.
- Drainage matters - peach roots do not like sitting wet.
- If your soil stays wet, plant on a mound - simple fix, big difference.
- Water deeply, then pause - let the soil partially dry before watering again.
- Prune every year - it keeps the tree open, improves airflow, and helps the tree put energy into fruit instead of tangled growth.
What If You Do Not Have Room?
You can still grow peaches in a large container. This is a great option for patios, small yards, renters, or gardeners who want better control over soil and drainage.
- Use a large pot with drainage holes.
- Choose a fast-draining potting mix, not heavy garden soil. We recommend Sunshine Abundance potting mix.
- Place the container in the sunniest spot you have.
- Water more often than in-ground trees, but never let the pot stay soggy.
- Prune to keep the tree compact and easy to manage.
Fertilizing
Peach trees are generous plants, but producing vigorous growth and a heavy crop of sweet fruit takes energy. Regular feeding makes a noticeable difference in tree health, flowering, and fruit quality.
I prefer a simple two-part approach that provides both steady background nutrition and quick, readily available nutrients when the tree is actively growing.
- Green Magic controlled-release fertilizer provides a steady supply of nutrients for months and serves as the foundation of the feeding program.
- Sunshine Boosters liquid fertilizers deliver amino acid-based nutrients that are quickly absorbed and especially useful during periods of active growth, flowering, and fruit development. Sunshine C-Cibus formula is the best for fruit trees.
During the growing season, this combination helps build stronger branches, healthier leaves, better flowering, and sweeter, higher-quality fruit.
If your tree shows yellowing leaves or weak growth, consistent feeding often makes a dramatic difference within a few weeks.
📚 More about low-chill peaches from our garden Blog
📚 More about Tropic Beauty Peach
Sunshine’s Philosophy: Lazy Peach Sundae 😺
Sunshine absolutely loves peach cobbler, especially when someone else does all the peeling, slicing, mixing, and baking. But when he is left to prepare dessert on his own, his standards become much more practical. Why turn on the oven when perfectly ripe peaches already taste amazing? His philosophy is simple: if a recipe takes less than five minutes and ends with peaches and vanilla ice cream in the same bowl, it is a masterpiece.
Sunshine's Lazy Peach Sundae
This is not cooking. This is assembly.
Ingredients
- 2 ripe homegrown peaches
- 2 big scoops of vanilla ice cream
- A drizzle of honey (optional)
- A pinch of cinnamon (optional)
Instructions
- Slice the peaches.
- Put them in a bowl.
- Add vanilla ice cream.
- Drizzle with honey and sprinkle with cinnamon if you feel ambitious.
- Eat immediately while smiling.
Sunshine's Review
"I peeled exactly nothing and still got dessert. This is my kind of gardening."
Want this?
Start with a low-chill peach tree. That is usually how it begins.
Date: 10 May 2026
🍑 Tree-Ripened Peaches Change Everything

Smokey: Low-chill peach varieties for Florida. They ripen much sooner.
Sunshine: I thought peaches were for Georgia.
Smokey: Not if you plant low-chill peaches. And speaking of peaches, do you know about donut peaches?
Sunshine: Donut peaches? Finally, horticulture I can understand.
Some fruits carry memories before you've even tasted them.
There's something about a peach still warm from the tree - the way it gives a little when you pick it, the smell that hits you before you even take a bite. It makes you slow down. It makes summer feel like it actually meant to show up.
For Florida gardeners, that moment used to feel borrowed. Peaches were a Georgia thing, a Carolina thing. You'd admire someone else's harvest and quietly file it under not for us.
Low-chill peaches rewrote that story.
Here's the thing about regular peaches - they need cold. Not just a cool night or two, but a real winter. We're talking 600 to 1,000 hours below 45F. That's how they know to wake up in spring and actually fruit. South Florida just doesn't deliver that. The trees will grow fine, look healthy even, and then give you almost nothing come harvest time. Frustrating doesn't cover it.
Low-chill varieties are different. They were bred specifically for places like ours - warm winters, mild springs. Some only need 100 hours of chill. A hundred. That's a few cold fronts, not a season. And because they're working with our climate instead of against it, they fruit reliably. Every year.
They're not just a Florida trick either. Gardeners in coastal Texas, southern Louisiana, southern California - anywhere in that Zone 8b to 10 range - have been growing these successfully. If you've got warm winters and thought peaches weren't for you, they probably just weren't the right peaches.
Date: 9 May 2026
9 tough trees for hot, dry spots that actually thrive
☀️ 9 tough trees for hot, dry spots that actually thrive
Why that one brutal spot in your yard never works? There’s always that one place - blazing sun, sandy or rocky soil, dries out fast, and everything you plant there struggles. In Florida, Arizona, and California, this isn’t rare - it’s the norm. The good news? Some trees don’t just tolerate it - they prefer it. Once established, these picks handle heat, drought, and neglect far better than typical landscape plants.
What makes these trees different? These are survivors. Many store water, have deep root systems, or evolved in dry climates. Translation - less watering, fewer losses, and a lot less frustration.
🔥 9 best trees for hot, dry spots
☀️ 1. Pony Tail Palm - Beaucarnea recurvata 📸












