Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 26 Jul 2025

More than white: rare Butterfly Gingers

Hedychium - Butterfly Ginger

More than white: rare Butterfly Gingers



If you’re a fan of that sweet, heady scent of the classic White Butterfly Ginger (Hedychium coronarium) - a symbol of Hawaiian paradise - you’ll be happy to know it has some beautiful, fragrant relatives!

Hedychium coronarium - White Butterfly Ginger
This is the one everyone knows and loves. Big, white, butterfly-shaped blooms with an intense perfume. Grows in sun or shade, survives light freezes, and fills the summer air with scent. A must for Southern gardens and anyone who wants a piece of island paradise.

Hedychium flavum x coccineum cv. Dr. Moy, Variegated Hardy Ginger Lily
A showstopper with variegated leaves splashed in creamy white, and peachy-orange fragrant flowers in late summer. This hybrid from Dr. Moy of the San Antonio Botanical Garden brings both bold foliage and beautiful scent. A real garden standout.

Hedychium flavum x coronarium, Yellow Butterfly Ginger, Nardo Ginger Lily
Looks like the classic white, but with soft yellow blooms and the same rich fragrance. Long, slightly fuzzy green leaves and flower spikes that light up late summer with scent and color. This variety grow fast and much bigger than plant also much bigger and vigorous than classic white Butterfly ginger.

🛒 Smell the difference - get your ginger trio

#Shade_Garden #Perfume_Plants

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 12 Oct 2025

You wont believe what glows in the shade: the rare blue ginger

Dichorisandra thyrsiflora - Blue Ginger

💎 You won't believe what glows in the shade: the rare blue ginger



💎 If you ever spot a flash of electric blue in the tropical shade, you might think your eyes are playing tricks on you, but that vivid color belongs to a rare Dichorisandra thyrsiflora - Blue Ginger.

💎 Despite its name, this isn’t a true ginger at all. It’s actually related to Tradescantia, the same family as familiar houseplants like the Wandering Jew and Spiderwort. Native to Brazil, Blue Ginger thrives in warm, humid shade, making it a perfect choice for patios, screened porches, garden corners, or indoor collections.

💎 Its glossy leaves and tall stems topped with clusters of sapphire-blue blooms create a tropical jewel effect. The flowers attract hummingbirds and butterflies, adding life and motion to shady areas where few other plants bloom so brightly.

💎 Give it rich, well-drained soil, steady moisture, and partial shade - and enjoy one of the rarest colors in the tropical plant world.

🛒 Get your own exotic Blue Ginger

📚 Learn more:


Is Sapphire Gem really a ginger?

#Container_Garden #Shade_Garden

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 21 Jun 2026

🍓The Strawberry Moon Rises: A Gardener's Excuse to Go Outside

Sunshine,  an  orange  tabby  cat,  compares  a  strawberry-glazed  donut  to 
 the  Strawberry  Moon  while  Smokey,  a  tuxedo  cat  wearing  glasses,  inspects 
 Strawberry  Tree  and  Strawberry  Guava  plants  at  Top 
 Tropicals.
Sunshine: Look at my strawberry-glazed donut. Same as the Strawberry Moon. I have been waiting for this all month. They say moon gardening is useful. Let's go planting!
Smokey: Science hasn't found much evidence for it.
Sunshine: Then what's the point?
Smokey: If the moon gets people into the garden, that's good enough for me.

On the evening of Monday, June 29, 2026, the full Strawberry Moon will rise low in the southeastern sky. Whether you follow a lunar calendar or not, it's a good excuse to spend a little time outside on a summer evening.

🌛 What Is the Strawberry Moon, Exactly?

Many of the familiar full moon names come from Native American traditions and reflect seasonal events in nature. June's full moon was named for the season when wild strawberries ripen across much of North America, not for any color in the sky. Despite the name, the moon won't glow pink or red. If it looks warm or golden, that's simply because any full moon takes on an amber tint when it hangs low near the horizon, the same atmospheric effect that paints sunsets orange. The "strawberry" is about the harvest, not the hue.

This year, the Strawberry Moon rises on the evening of June 29 and will appear low in the southeastern sky, making it a particularly beautiful moon to watch as dusk settles in.

🌓 Moon Gardening, an Old and Honest Tradition

For generations, gardeners across Europe and beyond timed their planting, pruning, and harvesting to the phases of the moon. Plant root crops during a waning moon, some traditions say, and leafy crops during a waxing one. Prune during certain phases to slow regrowth, harvest herbs at others for better potency. These calendars were passed down through generations of careful observers who paid close attention to their land and their results, and many still follow them today.

Modern science has found little evidence that lunar gravity or moonlight significantly affects plant growth. Yet the tradition persists, and plenty of growers still find real value in the rhythm it brings to the gardening year.

💡What We Know For Sure

Here's the practical truth, and it's the same one Smokey arrived at after thinking it over. Whether or not the moon influences your plants, the act of walking through your garden definitely does. A moon-phase calendar that gets you outside to check on your plants, pull a few weeds, prune back something leggy, top off the mulch, or water a thirsty pot is helping your garden, regardless of what's happening overhead.

The benefit isn't necessarily lunar. It's attention.

A garden rarely thrives because of a single grand effort. It thrives because of dozens of small ones: a little pruning, a little watering, a few weeds pulled before they become many.

Gardens reward the gardeners who show up, and if a full moon is your reminder to show up, that's a perfectly good reason to keep watching the sky.

📅 Beyond the Harvest

Not everything in a garden needs to produce a yield to be worthwhile. Marking the seasons the way our ancestors did, a strawberry moon in June, a harvest moon in fall, a snow moon in February, gives us small, recurring reasons to notice what's changing around us. It's a rhythm, not a requirement.

Think of the Strawberry Moon as a good excuse to take a walk through the garden.

The Strawberry Moon doesn't have to improve anything to be worth celebrating. It only needs to get you outside on a warm June evening, which, honestly, isn't a high bar to clear.

A Strawberry Moon Collection, Just for Fun

Sunshine immediately concluded that any moon named after strawberries deserved a few strawberry-themed plants. We couldn't argue with that logic, so we pulled together a few Top Tropicals favorites that fit the theme.

🍓 Strawberry Tree

Close-up  of  ripe  red  Strawberry  Tree  fruit  (Muntingia  calabura) 
 arranged  on  fresh  green  leaves  with  several  white  five-petaled  flowers  and 
 flower  buds,  displayed  on  a  rustic  wooden 
 surface.

The Strawberry Tree (Muntingia calabura) often carries flowers and fruit at the same time. Sweet red berries, delicate white blossoms, and lush foliage make this fast-growing tropical tree both ornamental and productive throughout much of the year.

Close-up  of  the  rare  yellow-fruited  Strawberry  Tree  (Muntingia 
 calabura)  showing  ripe  golden-yellow  berries  alongside  white  five-petaled 
 flowers  and  green  developing  fruit  among  textured  green 
 leaves.

A rare yellow-fruited form of Muntingia calabura (Strawberry Tree), displaying sweet golden berries, delicate white flowers, and immature green fruit all at the same time. This unusual selection offers the same fast growth and continuous fruiting as the red type, but with attractive yellow fruit that is seldom seen in cultivation.

Strawberry Tree (Muntingia calabura), also known as Jamaican Cherry, grows quickly and produces dainty white flowers resembling strawberry flowers, followed by an abundance of small cotton-candy-sweet berries that birds, wildlife, gardeners and their kids all appreciate.

📚 Learn more from Top Tropicals Garden Blog

🍓 Strawberry Guava

Strawberry Guava (Psidium littorale) brings glossy foliage and sweet, perfumed fruit that tastes something like its namesake crossed with a guava.

Close-up  of  a  strawberry  guava  branch  loaded  with  fruit  in  different 
 stages  of  ripening,  from  green  and  yellow  to  bright  pink-red.  Glossy 
 evergreen  leaves  surround  the  colorful  clusters  against  a  clear  blue 
 sky.

Strawberry Guava (Psidium littorale, or cattleianum) often carries fruit in multiple stages of ripening at once, creating a colorful display of green, golden, and ruby-red berries. The sweet, aromatic fruit is prized for fresh eating and attracts birds and wildlife to the garden.

🍓 Strawberry Dragon Fruit

Dragon Fruit Vietnamese Jaina Strawberry White (Hylocereus undatus ) produces bright pink fruit with refreshing white flesh and a flavor often described as a blend of strawberry, melon, and kiwi. Its enormous night-blooming flowers are every bit as impressive as the fruit, turning this vigorous climbing cactus into a spectacular summer showpiece.

Plate  of  Vietnamese  Jaina  Strawberry  White  dragon  fruit  showing  several
    whole  pink-skinned  fruits  alongside  sliced  fruit  revealing  bright  white 
 flesh  speckled  with  tiny  black 
 seeds.

Vietnamese Jaina Strawberry White Dragon Fruit is prized for its refreshing white flesh and mild sweet flavor with hints of strawberry, melon, and kiwi. The vivid pink skin and striking black-speckled interior make it as beautiful on the table as it is delicious to eat.

🍓 Strawberry Ginger

Coral Ginger Borneo Strawberry Pink (Riedelia coralina) is one of the rarest gingers in cultivation, producing unusual strawberry-pink flower spikes that seem almost too exotic to be real. The edible blooms have a pleasant spicy fragrance and flavor, making this New Guinea treasure as interesting to taste as it is to admire.

Whether you came for the moon or the plants, we hope you discovered something interesting. They just happen to share a name with the moon overhead this June, and that felt like reason enough to give them a little spotlight.

Close-up  of  Riedelia  coralina  (Coral  Ginger)  showing  an  unusual 
 strawberry-pink  flower  spike  emerging  among  large  glossy  tropical  leaves, 
 with  the  curved  tubular  flowers  standing  out  against  a  lush  green  jungle 
 background.

Riedelia coralina, known as Coral Ginger or Borneo Strawberry Pink, produces one of the most unusual flower displays in the ginger family. Its striking strawberry-pink blooms rise above lush foliage, creating a tropical focal point rarely seen outside specialized collections.

🍓🌱 How to Grow Them

If you live in a frost-free climate (USDA Zones 10+), simply plant these strawberry gems in the ground and enjoy. Strawberry Guava can tolerate occasional frosts down to about 28F once established.

Not so lucky? Many gardeners successfully grow Strawberry Guava, Strawberry Dragon Fruit, and Strawberry Tree in containers, moving them indoors or to a protected location during winter. You don't need a tropical climate to enjoy tropical fruit.

🏡 See You Outside

Whether you believe in moon gardening or not, June 29 is a good night to step outside, find an open view of the southeastern sky, and watch the Strawberry Moon rise. Bring a cup of tea, walk the garden beds while there's still light, pull a few weeds, and let the evening settle in around you.

And that may be the real lesson of the Strawberry Moon.

Sunshine: The Strawberry Moon is out. Time for gardening.
Smokey: What does the moon calendar recommend?
Sunshine: I have no idea. I left it on the kitchen table. Both hands are full.
Smokey: Of course they are. Coffee and donuts. Let's start with the weeds.

👉Start your Strawberry Moon Collection

Date: 11 Aug 2024

What is our most favorite Ginger plant? African Princess!

Costus fissiligulatus - African Princess, Cameroon Costus

🎀 What is our most favorite Ginger plant? African Princess!



👸 The most beautiful Ginger flower, in our opinion, is Costus fissiligulatus - African Princess, or Cameroon Costus - an amazing flowering Ginger from Gabon in West Africa.

👸 Dazzling pink trumpet flower with a yellow throat. It is very floriferous with an inflorescence of numerous flower buds.

👸 Low-growing plant only 3-4 ft that stands very erect.

👸 Easy grower with similar growing requirements to other gingers.

💻 What is your most favorite ginger? Share in comments!

📚 Gingers from previous posts:


Most interesting edible gingers
5 most spectacular Ginger species
How to French Kiss the Red Button Ginger

🛒 Get your own African Princess

#Shade_Garden #Container_Garden #Hedges_with_benefits

🔴 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 19 Jun 2024

Thumbs up the most fragrant ginger ever!

White Butterfly Ginger (Hedychium coronarium)

White Butterfly Ginger (Hedychium coronarium)

White Butterfly Ginger (Hedychium coronarium)

White Butterfly Ginger (Hedychium coronarium)

White Butterfly Ginger (Hedychium coronarium)

White Butterfly Ginger (Hedychium coronarium)

👍 Thumbs up the most fragrant ginger ever!



White Butterfly Ginger (Hedychium coronarium) is a must for every Southern garden.

Famous for its intense, sweet scent.

Symbol of Hawaiian Paradise along with Plumeria and Jasmine we mentioned earlier.

Lei and hair decoration: popular in Hawaii and the Pacific Islands for leis and hair adornments.

Butterfly-like flowers: bears fragrant, butterfly-resembling flowers in summer.

Great cut flower: long lasting cut flowers, ideal for scenting the home.

Can survive light freezes, with tops regrowing in the spring. Takes sun or shade.

🛒 Shop Butterfly Ginger

#Shade_Garden #Perfume_Plants

🏵 TopTropicals