Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 28 Dec 2025

🎉 2026 Gardening Resolution That Actually Works

According to our experts: Smokey and Sunshine. When we say experts, we do not mean consultants or trend writers. We mean two real gardeners. Smokey watches patterns. Sunshine notices when people rush. Together, they explain what actually works.

Smokey  the  tuxedo  cat  writes  gardening  plans  for  2026  at  a  table  while 
 


Sunshine  the  ginger  cat  rides  a  hobby  horse  holding  coffee,  with  donuts, 
 


plants,  and  a  fireplace  in  a  winter 
 


room.
Sunshine: Smokey, thank you for the Christmas present. I am riding this hobby horse straight into the Year of the Horse!
Smokey: I am making the plans for 2026. Planning makes gardening successful.
Sunshine: Coffee and donuts help too, so please include them in your plan.

Smokey: Hello gardeners. 2026 is the Year of the Horse.

Sunshine: Horses do not garden.

Smokey: Please do not interrupt me. No, they do not. That is just the calendar. What matters is what gardeners do at the start of every new year. They often rush and repeat the same mistakes.

Sunshine: The biggest one is rushing the garden before morning coffee.

Smokey: Correct. Rushing looks like effort, but it is usually just impatience. Gardens punish impatience very reliably.

Most early-season problems come from doing things too soon:
- watering before roots are active
- fertilizing before growth begins
- planting before conditions settle
- poking plants daily to check how the roots are growing

Sunshine: If you are poking the roots, the plant was fine until you started poking it.

Smokey: Good gardening is not constant action. It is knowing when to act and when to stop interfering.
- Plant when the timing is right.
- Let roots work quietly.
- Leave resting plants alone.

Sunshine: Coffee first. Donuts optional, but highly recommended.

Smokey: One last thing, while you are not rushing.

Our gift cards are still on promotion. They do not need planting, watering, or timing decisions today.

A gift card is a symbol of patience. Buy it now. Use it when the moment is right.

Smokey and Sunshine:
Our resolution for 2026 is simple: stop rushing the garden. Wishing you a calm, steady, coffee-fueled 2026 garden 🐾🌿

Date: 20 Dec 2025

☃️ Winter is choosing season

Smokey  the  tuxedo  cat  plans  spring  planting  on  a  laptop  plant 
 


encyclopedia  while  Sunshine  the  ginger  cat  relaxes  by  a  fireplace  in  a  cozy 
 


Christmas  living  room  with  tropical 
 


plants.

Smokey: "December is for planning, not planting."
Sunshine: "Gift card now. Perfect plants later."
Smokey: "You surprise me sometimes. Must be the donuts."

This time of year always feels special to us. The days are shorter, the garden slows down, and we finally have a moment to pause, look at our wish lists, and dream a little about spring.

As gardeners, we know winter is not really planting season. It is choosing season.

It is when ideas take shape. When we think about what we want to grow next, what we want to add, and what we want to do differently when warm days return. That is why, in winter, the best plant gift is not a plant itself. It is the promise of one.

Cold weather and holiday shipping can make winter plant deliveries stressful, especially for tropical plants traveling north. A gift card lets plants wait for the right moment, and lets the gardener enjoy the fun part now: planning, choosing, and imagining.

It also solves something we all know too well. Every gardener is wonderfully different. Some dream of fruit trees, others of flowers, rare collectors, or easy growers. Some plant in containers, some in the ground. Guessing is hard. A gift card lets them choose exactly what fits their garden and their vision.

🎁 Holiday Gift Card Bonus

To make the season a little brighter, we are offering a holiday gift card bonus through 12/31/2025.

When you purchase a gift card, we add 15% extra value. Just add Christmas greeting in gift card message field. For example, a $100 gift card becomes $115 to spend.

The bonus value is not valid with other promotions or discounts. Gift cards cannot be used to purchase other gift cards. Bonus value is added at the time of purchase.

🎁 Get a gift card

Date: 20 Dec 2025

🎄 From our home and garden to yours!

Christmas  yard  decoration  showing  a  festive  holiday  train  with  Santa,  a
 
 
  snowman,  and  gift-filled  cars  displayed  on  a  front  lawn  in  a  warm-climate 
 


neighborhood.

Hello friends,

From our home and garden to yours, we wish you a warm and peaceful holiday season. Whether you celebrate Christmas, Hanukkah, as it comes to a close, Kwanzaa, Feliz Navidad, the New Year, or all of the above, we hope your days are filled with light and the promise of what is growing ahead.

Gardening connects us across seasons, cultures, and traditions, and we are grateful to share this journey with you.

Date: 15 Dec 2025

🌿 Bring the Jungle Inside: Winter Survival Guide. Part 3. Watering and Humidity. ❄️


💦 Water, Humidity, and the Small Things That Decide Who Makes It to Spring

Smokey  the  tuxedo  cat  checks  soil  moisture  and  wipes  a  monstera  leaf 
 

while  Sunshine  the  ginger  cat  relaxes  with  a  watering  can  beside  indoor 
 

tropical  plants  in  winter.

Smokey: "Still damp. No watering today."
Sunshine: "Great. I am excellent at not watering."
Smokey: "You have been practicing not doing any work your whole life."

In Part 1 (Winter Survival Guide: Temperature) we covered the foundation: light, placement, and acclimation. That is the survival layer.

Part 2 (Winter Survival Guide: Temperature) is about what quietly ruins plants indoors in winter. Not overnight. Slowly.

Most winter losses come from good intentions and habits that worked fine outdoors or in summer, but fail indoors when growth slows.

Watering: Where Most Indoor Plants Die in Winter

If there is one winter skill that matters more than anything else, it is knowing when not to water.

In winter, light is weaker, temperatures are lower, roots stay cold longer, and growth slows or stops. Plants simply do not drink the way they do in summer.

How winter watering actually works

Do not water on a schedule. Winter does not care about your calendar.

Instead:

  • Water thoroughly when you do water.
  • Let excess drain out.
  • Then wait longer than feels comfortable.

Before watering, test the soil with your finger. Water only when the top inch or so is dry.

If the soil below still feels cool and damp, do nothing. That is the hardest skill to learn.

Remember what we covered in Part 1: in winter, soil and roots stay cold much longer. Cold roots absorb water very slowly. Wet, cold soil is not helpful moisture. It is stress.

Waiting is often the correct move.

Common winter watering traps

  • The soil surface looks dry, but the root ball is still wet.
  • Pots near windows dry unevenly.
  • Large pots stay wet for weeks.

Always check below the surface. If the pot feels cold and heavy, roots are not asking for water yet.

Signs you are watering too much

  • Soil stays wet for many days.
  • Pot feels heavy long after watering.
  • Leaves yellow and soften.
  • Fungus gnats appear.

As a rough guideline, most indoor tropicals need 25 to 50 percent less water than summer, sometimes even less in low light.

Always use room temperature water. Cold water shocks roots and slows recovery.

Humidity: Invisible Winter Stress

Winter indoor air is dry. Often far drier than people realize.

Heating systems pull moisture out of the air, and many homes sit at 20 to 30 percent humidity all winter. Most tropical plants prefer something closer to 50 to 60 percent.

Low humidity rarely kills plants outright. It weakens them first. That is why pests show up more often in winter. The plant is already stressed before insects arrive.

What low humidity looks like

  • Brown or crispy leaf edges.
  • Curling leaves.
  • New leaves stuck while unfolding.
  • Spider mites appearing suddenly.

What actually helps

  • Group plants together.
  • Use pebble trays.
  • Run a room humidifier.
  • Use bathrooms if light allows.

Humidity works best when plants are grouped. One isolated plant in dry air struggles far more than a group sharing moisture.

Misting leaves feels helpful, but it only raises humidity for minutes. It does not fix dry air.

Cleaning Leaves: More Important Than It Sounds

Winter light is already weak. Dust makes it worse.

Dusty leaves block light, clog stomata, and create hiding places for pests.

Wiping leaves is one of the simplest winter care steps, and one of the most ignored.

How to clean

  • Soft cloth.
  • Plain water.
  • Mild soap if needed.

Gently wipe. No scrubbing. Every few weeks is enough.

Plants with fuzzy leaves, like African violets, should only be brushed gently with a dry brush.

Clean leaves also make problems easier to see. You will spot mites, scale, or damage early instead of discovering it weeks later.

Winter is not the season to be surprised.

Soil and Pots Behave Differently Indoors

Soil that works outdoors often behaves badly indoors. No wind, lower evaporation, and cooler roots mean the same soil stays wet far longer than expected.

In winter, roots care more about oxygen than water. Soil that stays wet pushes oxygen out, even if the plant looks fine above the soil line.

This is why rot often appears suddenly in late winter, not right after watering mistakes.

Pot size matters

Large pots dry slowly. Slow drying plus cool soil equals rot.

If a plant is barely growing, a very large pot is not doing it any favors.

About repotting

Winter is not the time to repot unless you must.

Only repot if:

  • Roots are rotting.
  • Pests are severe.
  • The plant is clearly failing.

Repotting in winter slows recovery and often makes things worse.

Airflow: Quietly Important

Indoor winter air is still. Still air leads to mold, fungus, and spider mites.

Airflow is not about cooling plants. It is about breaking stagnant air layers that pests and fungus love.

A small fan on low, not blowing directly on plants, makes a big difference. Even gentle movement helps more than people expect.

Drainage and Mold: Boring but Critical

Never let pots sit in water.

Standing water causes root rot, fungus gnats, and mold smell. Always empty trays after watering.

Raise pots slightly so air can move underneath. It helps more than people expect.

If you smell sour soil or a musty odor, something is staying wet too long. That smell is an early warning, not a minor issue.

Fertilizer: Mostly Stop

This is where a lot of winter damage happens.

If a plant is not actively growing, fertilizer does not help. It hurts.

In winter, most indoor tropicals are in maintenance mode, not growth mode. Feeding during this time leads to salt buildup, root burn, and weak, floppy growth.

Green leaves do not mean the plant is growing. They often just mean the plant has not given up yet.

Growth shows up as new leaves, longer stems, or expanding roots. No growth means no feeding.

When light feeding is acceptable

Only if all of these are true:

  • The plant is warm.
  • Light is strong.
  • You see real new growth.

Even then, feed lightly and less often than summer.

Spring will come. You do not need to force it.

Common Winter Care Mistakes

  • Watering on a schedule.
  • Misting instead of humidifying.
  • Fertilizing to fix poor light.
  • Ignoring cold windowsills.
  • Placing pots on cold tile or stone.
  • Repotting out of boredom.
  • Letting trays stay wet.
  • Assuming green leaves mean growth.
  • Assuming winter leaf drop always means death.

Quick Winter FAQ

My soil stays wet forever.
Too little light, too cold, or pot too large. Water less.

Leaves are crispy but soil is wet.
Low humidity combined with overwatering.

Should I mist every day?
No. Fix the air, not the leaves.

Can I fertilize just a little?
Only if the plant is clearly growing.

Why do I suddenly have fungus gnats?
Wet soil indoors is the invitation.

My plant looks fine but has not grown in months. Is that bad?
No. Stability is success in winter.

Date: 15 Dec 2025

Thank you for coming to Plant Market in Ft Myers

Kristi  Vanbenschoten,  Top  Tropicals  manager,  holding  Persephone  the  cat
 
 
  on  her  shoulder  in  the  garden

Kristi Vanbenschoten, Top Tropicals manager, and Persephone the cat

Thank you to everyone who came out and supported our Holiday Plant Market last Saturday, December 13, 2025. It was great to see familiar faces, meet new visitors, and watch the garden fill with people exploring, asking questions, and choosing new plants to take home. Our CatsPeople were busy greeting guests, supervising carts, and making sure everyone felt welcome. Your support and good energy are what make these events special for us. We hope your new plants settle in beautifully, and we look forward to seeing you back in the garden soon!

Check out Event Mementos

Persephone  the  cat  at  Garden  Event