Date: 5 Jan 2026
Smokey: You get warm when you work. Plant now so roots are established before spring growth starts.
Sunshine: Alright. Lets see who stays warmer - you digging or me with coffee.
🌴 Why winter planting works in a warm climate
By our plant expert Tatiana Anderson
We are lucky to live in a warm climate. This is how I think about the seasons here. Winter is for roots. Spring is for growth. Summer is for managing heat and water.
So if we want plants that handle summer better, we plant them in the season that gives them the best start. Winter here is comfortable. The soil stays workable. The days are mild. And plants are not being stressed by heat. That is exactly why winter is the best time to plant in Florida and other warm areas.
If we use this season well, plants go into spring already settled instead of trying to catch up. This is what I like to plant now, and why.
🟢 Trees first. Anything that will be in the ground for years. Fruit trees, shade trees, flowering trees.
When we plant them in winter,
they can focus on roots before the spring growth surge starts. By the time
spring arrives, the tree is anchored and ready to grow on top.
Examples: mango, avocado, Eugenia
cherries, jackfruit,
sapodilla,
longan, lychee, canistel.
🟢 Shrubs next.
Shrubs establish faster than trees, but winter still gives
them an advantage. They settle in quietly before the spring flush and bloom
cycles begin. That usually means steadier growth and fewer problems
once heat returns.
Examples: gardenia,
jasmine, brunfelsia,
hibiscus, clerodendrums.
🟢
Vines are often overlooked. Vines want to grow fast when spring starts.
If the root system is not ready, you get weak growth and frustration.
Planting vines in winter gives them time to build a foundation first, so
spring growth has support.
Examples: Rangoon
creeper,
stephanotis, Petrea, Mexican
Flame Vine.
Date: 11 Jan 2026
How to lose weight naturally with tropical fruit and plants
🍑 How to lose weight naturally with tropical fruit and plants
🏃♀️ Losing weight isn’t about starving yourself - it’s about supporting your body with the right nutrients and keeping things balanced. Plants can help by boosting your metabolism, keeping you full longer, improving digestion, and regulating blood sugar. When you build a food forest with the right plants, you’re investing in long-term health that tastes good and feels good.
🏆 15 TOP TROPICAL plants and fruits that naturally help with weight management:
- 💚 Papaya – Contains enzymes like papain that aid digestion, and it’s high in water and fiber—great for feeling full.
- 💚 Mango – Supports fat metabolism and reduces inflammation. Its fiber helps regulate appetite and digestion.
- 💚 Avocado – Full of healthy fats and fiber, avocado helps you feel satisfied longer and supports steady energy levels.
- 💚 Banana – Rich in resistant starch (especially when underripe), bananas help support gut health and fat metabolism.
- 💚 Jackfruit – High in fiber and low in fat, this fruit keeps blood sugar steady and supports slow, sustained energy.
- 💚 Yerba Mate – A natural tea with gentle stimulant properties that may help reduce appetite and increase fat burn.
- 💚 Moringa – Known as a superfood, moringa helps regulate blood sugar and boosts metabolism with powerful nutrients.
- 💚 Galangal (Thai Ginger) – Supports digestion and contains compounds that may help increase fat burning, like regular ginger.
- 💚 Cinnamon – Can improve insulin sensitivity and help with sugar cravings, making it easier to stay on track.
- 💚 Insulin Ginger (Costus igneus) – Traditionally used to manage blood sugar, it also supports digestion and energy. Chewing the spiraled leaves or brewing them as tea is a natural way to get more from your garden.
- 💚 Dragon Fruit – Extremely high in fiber, dragon fruit supports healthy digestion and helps regulate metabolism, which can aid weight loss.
- 💚 Pomegranate – Used for centuries in Ayurvedic medicine to improve metabolism. Its antioxidant-rich juice supports fat burning and digestion.
- 💚 Tea Leaf Tree (Camellia sinensis) – The source of green, black, and white tea. These teas are linked to metabolism boost, heart health, and appetite regulation.
- 💚 Noni – A powerhouse fruit traditionally used for inflammation, immune health, blood sugar balance, and metabolism support. It may also help reduce fat accumulation and boost overall vitality.
- 💚 Canistel (Eggfruit, Pouteria campechiana) is a naturally sweet, nutrient-dense fruit that helps curb sugar cravings while keeping you full longer. Its rich fiber content and slow-digesting carbs make it a great choice for supporting weight management without reaching for processed snacks.
❗️When you grow these plants in your home garden or food forest, you're not just planting food - you’re planting tools for better health.
And bonus: gardening itself keeps you active and stress-free, which is another win for your waistline.
🛒 Explore tropical fruit and edibles
📚 Learn more about natural weight loss with plants:
- Tropical fruit health benefits guide: Part 1 and Part 2.
- How to make lots of Insulin Ginger plants quickly and get more health benefits
- Truth about which fruit helps you lose weight faster: Mango or Papaya?
- Jambolan health and life benefits
- Health benefits of dragon fruit
- Weight loss with Noni
- Healing drops of blood: why Pomegranate is a superfood
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Date: 20 Feb 2026
Florida freeze damage - what to replant after a record cold winter
❄️ Florida freeze damage - what to replant after a record cold winter
🌱 A record freeze changed Florida gardens
After the recent record cold across Florida, many gardeners are now seeing the real damage - browned leaves, split stems, collapsed shrubs, and fruit trees that may not recover.
Some plants surprised us with new growth. Others are clearly gone.
The practical question is simple: what should you replant so it does not happen again next winter?
The good news - you can build a more frost-resilient garden without giving up beauty or fruit.
🌱 First - do not rush to rip everything out
Before replacing anything, check carefully:
Scratch the bark lightly - green underneath means the branch is alive.
- Wait for consistent warm weather - some plants re-sprout weeks or even months later.
- Look for growth higher on the stem, not just at the base.
🌱 Why some plants survived and others did not
Freeze survival depends on several factors:
Duration of cold - 2 hours vs 8 hours makes a major difference
- Microclimate - south-facing walls, wind protection, canopy cover
- Plant maturity - established roots handle stress better
- Pre-freeze health - overfertilized, soft growth freezes faster
🌱 What to replant for a frost-resilient garden
Instead of replacing losses with the same tender species, consider:
Cold-hardy fruit trees
- Proven freeze survivors from this winter
- Shrubs that tolerate brief dips below freezing
- Layered planting for wind protection
- Plant tender species closer to structures.
- Use hardy trees as windbreaks.
- Avoid low frost pockets.
- Improve drainage - wet roots freeze faster.
When redesigning:
✍️ Check the list of freeze survivors:
What tropical plants survived Florida's historic freeze without protection
🌱 Rebuild with strategy, not emotion
After freeze damage, many gardeners replant quickly - only to repeat the same losses.
A better approach:
Identify what truly died.
- Learn which species survived locally.
- Choose varieties proven in your climate zone.
- Design with cold in mind.
🌱 Spring Equinox - a natural reset
The Spring equinox marks equal day and night and the astronomical start of spring. From this point forward, daylight increases and active growth accelerates.
For Florida gardeners, it is a natural reset.
New growth begins. Roots wake up. Replacement planting becomes safer.
This is the right time to rebuild.
🛒 Explore cold tolerant tropical plants and cold hardy Avocados
- 🎥 What tropical plants survived Florida's historic freeze without protection
- 🎥 These Avocados survived 3 nights of 25F hard freeze, Florida Record Freeze
📚 Learn more:
- · Top Ten Fruit Tree Winners of Florida 2026 Record Freeze
- · Top Ten Flowering Tree Winners of Florida 2026 Record Freeze
- · To trim or not to trim? When and how to trim damaged plants after winter
- · Cold-hardy avocado varieties - what freezing they really survive
- · Cold-hardy avocado survival groups - what the numbers really mean
#Discover #How_to
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Date: 20 Feb 2026
Top Ten Flowering Tree Winners of Florida 2026 Record Freeze
Bauhinia Orchid Tree
Beaucarnea recurvata - Pony Tail
Caesalpinia mexicana, Mexican Bird of Paradise
Callistemon - Bottlebrush
Erythrina
Jacaranda tree
Magnolia figo
Magnolia Little Gem
Tabebuia chrysotricha
Tabebuia impetiginosa
🏆 Top Ten Flowering Tree Winners of Florida 2026 Record Freeze
These flowering trees had no damage after 3 nights of hard freeze (25F) with NO PROTECTION:
- ✔️ Bauhinia Orchid Trees - several species
- ✔️ Beaucarnea recurvata - Pony Tail
- ✔️ Caesalpinia mexicana, Mexican Bird of Paradise
- ✔️ Callistemon - Bottlebrush
- ✔️ Erythrina - several species
- ✔️ Jacaranda tree
- ✔️ Magnolia figo
- ✔️ Magnolia Little Gem
- ✔️ Tabebuia chrysotricha
- ✔️ Tabebuia impetiginosa
🛒 Explore cold tolerant tropical plants
- 🎥 What tropical plants survived Florida's historic freeze without protection
- 🎥 These Avocados survived 3 nights of 25F hard freeze, Florida Record Freeze
📚 Learn more:
- · Top Ten Fruit Tree Winners of Florida 2026 Record Freeze
- · To trim or not to trim? When and how to trim damaged plants after winter
- · Cold-hardy avocado varieties - what freezing they really survive
- · Cold-hardy avocado survival groups - what the numbers really mean
#Discover #How_to #Trees
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Date: 12 Mar 2026
❄️Cold-Hardy Avocados and Fruit Trees
Earlier in early February we had a rough stretch at the B-Farm in Sebring. Three nights around 25°F with steady wind. Weather like that quickly shows which plants actually belong in Zone 9 and which ones only look good on paper.
Once things warmed up and we could see the real results, a few clear winners stood out. All of the macadamias handled the cold surprisingly well. The grumichamas stayed solid. And the cold-hardy avocado varieties again proved why gardeners rely on them in borderline climates.
Instead of listing every tropical plant that might survive a freeze, we decided to keep things practical and focus on the ones that actually went through this cold spell and that we currently have in stock.
If you garden in USDA Zone 8b-9, these are the kinds of trees that make winter a lot less stressful.
📖Read the full article: 2026 Freeze Guide: Cold-Hardy Avocados and Fruit Trees.



