Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 4 Nov 2025

The secret Brain Food growing in my backyard (and it tastes like green peas!)

Tropical Asparagus (Sauropus androgynus)

🏆 The secret Brain Food growing in my backyard (and it tastes like green peas!)

  • 🌿 Katuk, or Tropical Asparagus (Sauropus androgynus), is one of the most underrated edible plants you can grow. This leafy tropical shrub is a superfood in disguise. It grows fast, looks lush, and its tender young shoots taste just like green peas.
  • 🌿 Native to Southeast Asia, Katuk is a kitchen staple in places like Vietnam, Malaysia, and Thailand. The leaves and shoots are used in soups, stews, and stir-fries with egg or seafood. It’s not only delicious but also incredibly nutritious - rich in nutrients linked to improved memory and reduced cognitive aging: folate, lutein, and especially vitamin K, which is rare in plants.
  • 🌿 Katuk thrives in sun or partial shade, needs little care, and grows into a dense, bushy plant that gives you edible greens all year round. If you want something that feeds both your garden and your health, this one’s a winner!


🛒 Add Katuk Superfood to your Food Forest

Lean more:
🍴 Katuk egg stir-fry: Quick-n-Fun exotic recipes
✔️ Discover the health benefits of Katuk: a Superfood for your mind and body
📚 Tropical Asparagus, Katuk: Grow your own food
📱 How to cook with Katuk

#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover

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Date: 9 Jan 2026

Mango Tree for Zone 5: top 15 Condo Mango for growing in cold areas

Mango Tree for Zone 5

🥭 Mango Tree for Zone 5: top 15 Condo Mango for growing in cold areas

  • 🥭 Can you grow a mango tree in Zone 5? Short answer - yes! The trick is - containers!
  • Mango trees are tropical plants but they do great in pots when you choose the right varieties.
  • 🥭 Compact types stay short, respond well to pruning, and produce in containers.
  • You can grow them on a patio, balcony, even move them indoors in your condo for winter. That is why they are called condo mangoes!
    During warm months, they live outside.
    When cold weather hits, they come inside.
  • 🥭 With good light, proper watering, fertilizing, and some patience, these trees can reward you with real mangoes. Not a farm harvest, but enough to enjoy and share.


🏆 Most popular Condo Mango varieties:


Baptiste
Carrie
Cogshall
Diamond
Fairchild
Ice Cream
Julie
Keitt
Lancetilla
Lemon Meringue
Mallika
Nam Doc Mai
Okrung
Pickering
Venus

🛒 Discover Condo Mango

📚 Learn more:
#Food_Forest #How_to #Discover #Mango

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Date: 17 Feb 2026

Lunar New Year starts today - welcome the Year of the Fire Horse 2026 with Jasmines

Year of the Fire Horse 2026 with its lucky plants Jasmines

Year of the Fire Horse 2026 with its lucky plants Jasmines

🔥 Lunar New Year starts today - welcome the Year of the Fire Horse 2026 with Jasmines

  • 💮 One of the luckiest plants for 2026 is Jasmine. Today, February 17, 2026, the Lunar New Year begins, welcoming the energetic and passionate Year of the Fire Horse.
  • 💮 If you’ve been feeling restless, ready for movement, or craving something fresh in your life - that’s Horse energy. This year is about action, authenticity, and doing things your way. And in Chinese tradition, certain plants help align your space with that powerful momentum.
  • 💮 Why Jasmine is especially lucky this year


    Jasmine symbolizes love, luck, and beauty - three themes closely connected to the Fire Horse’s vibrant spirit. Horses are social, expressive, and affectionate. Jasmine’s sweet fragrance supports harmony, romance, and positive energy in your home.
    In Feng Shui traditions, fragrant flowering plants help soften intense Fire energy. Jasmine does exactly that - it balances passion with calm.
  • 💮 How to use Jasmine for good fortune in 2026


· Grow jasmine near entrances or windows to invite good luck into your home
  • · Place it in patios or garden walkways where its scent can circulate
  • · Use jasmine oil or candles in bedrooms to enhance relaxation and romantic harmony


💮 RReady for momentum?


Ready to feel bold, inspired, and a little unstoppable? The Year of the Fire Horse moves fast - and it rewards those who move with it. Think you need more clarity, more spark, more direction? Jasmine anchors that fire with calm confidence. It keeps the passion high and the chaos low.
If you’re stepping into 2026 with purpose, don’t just make resolutions. Plant something living. Let jasmine bloom beside you - and grow into the year you’ve been waiting for.

🛒 Discover lucky Jasmine plants

📚 Learn more:
#Horoscope #Perfume_Plants #Discover

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Date: 16 Feb 2026

Yes, you can grow a mango tree on your patio - here is how to do it right

Mango fruiting in container

Mango fruiting in container

🥭 Yes, you can grow a container mango tree on your patio - here is how to do it right



Think you need a backyard orchard to grow mangoes? You don't. Mango trees grow very well in containers. Compact varieties, often called condo mangoes, stay naturally smaller and are well suited for pots, patios, and small yards. We grow and ship mango trees nationwide and have seen which varieties perform best in containers.

Growing mangoes in pots is also practical in cooler climates. The tree can be moved to protection during cold weather while still producing real fruit. Here is how to do it right.

🥭 Pick the right condo mango tree variety



Choose condo or semi-dwarf mango varieties that stay smaller and respond well to pruning. These mango trees usually stay 6 to 10 feet tall in containers with light pruning. Fruit size is full-size, just fewer than on large trees.

Good mango choices for pots include:
  • · Cogshall - compact and productive
  • · Pickering - naturally small and reliable
  • · Carrie - manageable size, great flavor
  • · Ice Cream - slow growing, narrow canopy
  • · Julie - classic Caribbean type
  • · more condo varieties...


🥭 Choose the right pot



Start small. Young mango trees do best in a 5- to 7-gallon pot. Oversized containers too early often cause overwatering and root issues.

Increase size gradually:
First pot: 5-7 gallons
Next size: 10-15 gallons
Mature container: 20-25 gallons

The pot must drain well. Mango roots dislike wet soil. Add holes if needed. Plastic, ceramic, and fabric pots all work.
  • 🥭 Use fast-draining soil



    Mango trees need air around their roots.
    Use a loose, fast-draining mix, such as Abundance Professional Soilless Mix. Improve drainage with perlite, pine bark, or coarse sand. Avoid heavy or water-holding soils. Drainage matters more than fancy ingredients.
  • 🥭 Water carefully



    Mango trees prefer a wet-dry cycle.
    Water deeply, then allow the top few inches of soil to dry before watering again. Always check with your finger first.
    In warm weather, water once or twice a week. In winter, much less. Overwatering is the most common container mistake.
  • 🥭 Give plenty of sun



    Mango trees love sun and heat.
    Place the pot in full sun with at least 8 hours daily. More sun improves growth and flowering.
    If overwintered indoors, use the brightest window possible. Grow lights help, but outdoor sun is best when weather allows.
  • 🥭 Fertilize lightly but consistently



    Potted mango trees benefit from regular feeding during active growth.
    Use a balanced mango or fruit tree fertilizer such as Sunshine Mango Tango (safe to use with every watering, year-around). Controlled-release fertilizer Green Magic (every 6 months) work well too. Avoid excess feeding, which promotes leaves over flowers.
    If leaves pale, check watering first, then nutrition.
  • 🥭 Prune to stay compact



    Pruning is essential for mangoes in pots.
    Light tipping and trimming control size, encourage branching, and increase flowering points. Keep the canopy open and balanced. Watch how simple tipping works in real life: .
    Avoid heavy pruning before flowering. Most pruning is best right after harvest.
  • 🥭 Protect from cold



    Mango trees are tropical and cold-sensitive.
    When temperatures drop below 40F, move the pot to protection or indoors. Young trees are especially vulnerable.
    During winter, reduce watering and stop fertilizing. Growth slows and the tree rests.
    When warm weather returns, reintroduce the tree to sun gradually to prevent leaf burn.
  • 🥭 Final thoughts



    Growing a mango tree in a pot is practical and rewarding. With the right variety, good drainage, full sun, and careful watering, a potted mango can thrive and fruit for years, even in small spaces. Ready to start? Choose a compact mango variety.


🛒 Discover Condo Mango

📚 Learn more:
#Food_Forest #How_to #Discover #Mango

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Date: 21 Feb 2026

The best time to plant a fruit tree was 20 years ago - here is why you need to plant it now

Litchi chinensis - Smiles under the Lychee tree

Litchi chinensis - Smiles under the Lychee tree

🍑 The best time to plant a fruit tree was 20 years ago - here is why you need to plant it now



They say the best time to plant a fruit tree was 20 years ago.
The second best time is today.

A fruit tree is not a seasonal purchase. It is not a decoration. It is a decision that stretches far beyond you.

When you plant a mango, an avocado, a loquat, a lychee tree - you are not just planting for this summer. You are planting for children who will climb that tree. For neighbors who will ask for a basket of fruit. For someone who may live in your house long after you are gone.

Fruit trees are quiet investments in the future.
Unlike annual crops that come and go, a tree deepens its roots every year. Many fruit trees - especially mangoes - can live for decades, even a century. They outlive trends, owners, renovations, even mortgages. They stand there, steady, producing.

Even if you sell the house, the tree remains.
The next family will walk into the yard and discover fruit hanging overhead. Imagine buying a home and realizing someone before you planted abundance!

That is a gift.

In many parts of the world, mango trees are called generational crops. One farmer plants them. His children harvest them. His grandchildren sell the fruit. A single decision continues to feed and support a family long after the planter is gone.
There is something deeply grounding about that.

We live in a fast world. Quick returns. Quick moves. Quick upgrades.
A fruit tree moves at a different pace. It asks for patience. It rewards consistency. It teaches you to think long term.

Planting a fruit tree says:
I believe in tomorrow.
I believe this land will matter.
I believe someone will stand here after me.

And even if you never taste the fullest harvest, someone will.
Passing fruit trees through generations is more than horticulture - it is legacy. It is continuity. It is resilience. It is saying that this space, this soil, this home will keep giving.

So plant it now.
Plant it for your children.
Plant it for the next homeowner.
Plant it for shade you may never sit under.
Plant it for fruit you may never pick.
Because one day, someone will walk into that yard, look up, and thank the person who thought ahead.
Let that person be you.

🛒 Explore fruit trees for your orchard
  • 👉 Tropical Fruit favorites:



🥭 Mango
Avocado
🍒 Cherry
🍊 Loquat
🍈 Jackfruit
🍑 Peach tree
🍉 Guava
🍏 Sugar apple
🍇 Mulberry
🍐 Sapodilla

#Food_Forest #Discover

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