Where does Blackberry Jam come from? It comes from Gardenia!
Randia formosa - Blackberry Jam Fruit, flower
Randia formosa - Blackberry Jam Fruit, fruit
Where does Blackberry Jam come from? It comes from Gardenia!
Randia formosa - Blackberry Jam Fruit, Jasmin de Rosa is a curious small evergreen tree from South America that combines features of a fragrant flower and delicious dessert fruit which tastes like fresh Blackberry jam. Fragrant white flowers are similar to Gardenia.
This relatively hardy tropical can be grown in a container as well as in the ground. It's very сompact (4-5 ft), perfect for container culture, will fruit in a container.
Kids love the fruit! Many claim that it is even better than Blackberry preserves.
Large tubular white flowers attract nocturnal moths. Since the plant is closely related to the gardenia (Rubiaceae plant family), its flowers are sweetly fragrant.
Produces as many as 25-30 fruits at a time. Since it blooms for a few months from Summer through Winter, fruiting and flowering can be enjoyed even when other plants are dormant.
Sunshine: I love peach cobbler. Smokey, why are peaches on
the tree so early? 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.
Peach Plant Facts
Botanical name: Prunus persica, Amygdalus persica Also known as: Peach
USDA Zone: 5 - 10
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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.
Flat peaches - sometimes called DONUT peaches - are
known
for their sweet white flesh, low acidity, and fun squashed shape.
Date: 18 Apr 2026
The Secret to a Sharper Mind Might Be Growing in Your Backyard
Harvesting tropical fruits
The Secret to a Sharper Mind Might Be Growing in Your Backyard
Your garden shed might hold a more powerful tool for brain health than your medicine cabinet. What if the best defense against cognitive decline isn’t found in a pill bottle - but right outside your door? While we often think of gardening as just a hobby, new research suggests that the combination of physical "zone-pushing" and harvesting your own nutrient-dense tropical fruit could be a literal life-saver for your brain.
🍒 What the Research Actually Says
A massive study recently published in the journal Neurology followed more than 92,000 people to see how diet impacts the mind. The findings were clear: the quality of the plant-based foods you eat plays a massive role in your risk of dementia. It isn't just about "eating your veggies" - it's about which ones you choose.
(The full study: Plant-Based Dietary Patterns and Risk of Alzheimer Disease and Related Dementias in the Multiethnic Cohort Study)
🍒 Why Growing Your Own Fruit Changes the Game
If you grow your own fruit, you quietly solve two problems at once. It turns a "diet plan" into a natural part of your day.
1. Effortless Nutrition
When a ripe mango, a handful of mulberries, or a fresh guava is hanging within arm's reach, you eat it. It replaces processed, sugary snacks without any "willpower" required. You are naturally moving toward the high-quality, whole-food diet the research supports.
Mango Plant Facts
Botanical name: Mangifera indica Also known as: Mango
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
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2. Functional Fitness
Gardening doesn't feel like a workout, but it is. Bending, pruning, carrying pots, and digging are all forms of functional movement. It’s steady, useful physical activity that supports your heart and brain while you’re focused on your plants.
3. The "Outdoor" Effect
Sunlight and fresh air are natural mood boosters. The mental focus required to manage tropical plants - especially when you’re protecting them from a surprise freeze - provides a level of mental engagement and stress relief that you just can't get from a treadmill.
🍒 What to plant if you are just starting
You don’t need a massive orchard to start investing in your brain health. One or two plants can shift your habits immediately.
Botanical name: Carica papaya Also known as: Papaya
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
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For Small Spaces:Dwarf Mango varieties and Cherries (Eugenias or Acerola), Pineapples thrive in containers and provide massive doses of antioxidants.
Pineapple Plant Facts
Botanical name: Ananas comosus Also known as: Pineapple, Pina
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
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For the "Zone Pusher":Figs and cold-hardy Avocados offer healthy fats and fiber that are essential for long-term health.
Fig Tree Plant Facts
Botanical name: Ficus carica Also known as: Fig Tree, Brevo
USDA Zone: 7 - 10
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Avocado Plant Facts
Botanical name: Persea americana, Persea gratissima Also known as: Avocado, Alligator Pear, Aguacate, Abacate
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
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🍒 Start Small, Start Now
The research makes one thing clear: improving your food quality matters, and you can see results no matter your age. Planting a fruit tree changes what you eat, how you move, and how often you step outside.
That’s more than just gardening - that’s a lifestyle shift your brain will thank you for.
🍒 FAQ
Does fruit really support brain health?
Yes. Diets rich in whole, high-quality plant foods are linked to a lower risk of dementia, especially when they replace processed snacks and added sugars.
Is gardening enough to count as exercise?
Absolutely. Regular gardening provides steady, functional movement that improves circulation and supports overall physical health.
Is it too late for me to start?
No. The study showed that even participants who improved their diet quality in their 60s and 70s saw a measurable reduction in dementia risk.
Avocado Fantastic: the hidden world beyond green and black
Avocado Fantastic fruit
Avocado Fantastic tree
Avocado Fantastic: the hidden world beyond green and black
Most people think avocados come in two colors - green and black. Maybe they've heard of Hass. But the hidden world of avocados is far more diverse, filled with giant fruits, unusual shapes, red-skinned varieties, and even trees that can handle surprising cold.
One of the most remarkable is Fantastic.
💚 The avocado that wasn't supposed to survive
Avocados are often considered tropical and tender. Fantastic challenges that idea. This unusual variety gained a following in Texas, where it reportedly survived temperatures near 10F around San Antonio. Mature trees can tolerate temperatures around 15F for short periods, making it one of the most cold-hardy avocados available.
For gardeners in cooler regions, Fantastic has become something of a legend - proof that growing avocados is not limited to the tropics.
💚 A survivor of Florida's historic freeze
During Florida's historic February 2026 freeze, temperatures at our Sebring nursery dropped to 25F with several nights of prolonged freezing. While many tropical plants suffered damage, Fantastic came through without noticeable injury - remarkable performance for a tropical fruit tree.
💚 More than just a tough tree
Fantastic would not be worth growing if cold hardiness were its only claim to fame. Fortunately, it also produces excellent fruit.
The avocados are relatively small, typically weighing 6 to 8 ounces, with very thin green skin that darkens as the fruit matures. Inside is smooth, creamy flesh with a rich, buttery texture and pleasant nutty flavor.
The skin is so thin that many people simply cut the fruit in half and scoop it out with a spoon, or even it it with the skin. This is the kind of avocado often enjoyed fresh rather than turned into guacamole.
💚 A handsome, manageable tree
Fantastic is a Mexican-type avocado, and it shows many of the characteristics that make this race so appealing.
The tree has an attractive upright growth habit and tends to remain more compact than many large Florida avocado varieties. Rather than becoming an enormous shade tree, it often develops into a narrower, more manageable specimen that fits comfortably into a home landscape.
The foliage is elegant and refined, giving the tree a lighter appearance than many broad-leaved avocados. Like other Mexican-type varieties, the leaves release a pleasant anise-like fragrance when crushed - a surprising feature that many gardeners discover by accident.
💚 Why Fantastic deserves more attention
Many avocado collectors spend years searching for unusual varieties. Some are chasing flavor. Others want larger fruit or longer harvest seasons.
Fantastic offers something different: confidence.
It gives gardeners in cooler climates a chance to grow a fruit that many people assume is impossible outside the tropics. Even in warmer regions, its remarkable cold tolerance provides peace of mind when winter weather turns unpredictable.
In a world where most shoppers only see green avocados and black avocados at the grocery store, Fantastic is a reminder that the hidden world of avocados is far richer, more diverse, and far more interesting than most people realize.
And for many growers, that discovery is simply Fantastic. 👉 More