Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 12 Jan 2026

Watch how to squeeze natural shampoo from the Ginger!

Shampoo Ginger, Zingiber zerumbet, Pine Cone Ginger

💄 Watch how to squeeze natural shampoo from the Ginger!



🎆 Shampoo ginger uses and fragrance



Shampoo Ginger, also known as Zingiber zerumbet or Pine Cone Ginger, is one of those plants that sounds too good to be true - but isn’t. This tropical ginger has been used for centuries not just as an ornamental plant, but as a practical, fragrant, everyday resource.

Pine Cone Ginger Plant Facts

Botanical name: Zingiber zerumbet
Also known as: Pine Cone Ginger, Shampoo Ginger
USDA Zone: 8 - 10
Highligths Small plant 2-5 ftSemi-shadeShadeWatering: Regular. Let topsoil dry slightlyRed, crimson, vinous flowersOrnamental foliage
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🎆 Natural shampoo from a flower cone



The most famous use of shampoo ginger comes from its bright red, pine cone-shaped flower bracts. When the cones mature, they fill with a milky, slippery liquid. Simply squeezing the cone releases this natural cleanser, traditionally used as shampoo in Asia and Hawaii. It gently cleans hair, leaves it soft, and adds a light, fresh scent. Even today, extracts of shampoo ginger are still used in commercial shampoos and hair products.

🎆 Fragrance throughout the entire plant



Shampoo ginger isn’t just useful - it smells amazing. The leaves, stems, and cones all carry a warm, spicy fragrance typical of true gingers. The scent is fresh and clean, with earthy and slightly citrusy notes. Because of this, the plant has also been used in traditional body rinses, hair treatments, and natural perfumes.

🎆 More than hair care



Beyond shampoo, the cones are popular as long-lasting cut flowers, often used in tropical floral arrangements. The plant itself grows into a lush, leafy clump that adds strong tropical character to gardens, especially in warm, humid climates.

🎆 A plant with a traveling history



Shampoo ginger is also known as a “canoe plant.” Ancient Polynesian voyagers intentionally carried it across the Pacific as they settled new islands. Its usefulness, fragrance, and beauty made it valuable enough to earn a place on long ocean journeys.

Shampoo ginger is a rare mix of beauty, history, fragrance, and function - a plant that proves some of the most interesting garden plants are also the most practical.

🛒 Get your own natural shampoo from Pine Cone Ginger

📚 Learn more:


🔴Zingiber zerumbet in Plant Encyclopedia
🔴Do you have Shampoo Ginger in your garden?
🔴Free natural shampoo: squeeze it and see what comes out!
🔴What Ginger makes a natural shampoo
🔴5 most spectacular Ginger species

#Shade_Garden #Container_Garden #Remedies #Discover #Food_Forest

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Date: 12 Jan 2026

Cherry of the Rio Grande quick compote: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Cherry of the Rio Grande quick compote over pancakes

Cherry of the Rio Grande quick compote over pancakes

Eugenia aggregata - Cherry of the Rio Grande fruit

Eugenia aggregata - Cherry of the Rio Grande fruit

🍴 Cherry of the Rio Grande Quick Compote

This fast cherry compote is made from Cherry of the Rio Grande (Eugenia aggregata). It is tart, rich, and perfect over pancakes, waffles, toast, or warm bread.

Cherry of the Rio Grande Plant Facts

Botanical name: Eugenia involucrata, Eugenia aggregata
Also known as: Cherry of the Rio Grande, Cere Jodo Rio Grande
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Small tree 10-20 ftSemi-shadeFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryWatering: Regular. Let topsoil dry slightlyEdible plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
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Ingredients

  • 1 cup Cherry of the Rio Grande fruit, pitted
  • 2 to 4 tablespoons water

Instructions

  1. Place cherries and water in a small saucepan.
  2. Simmer over medium heat until the cherries soften and release juice.
  3. Mash lightly with a spoon for a chunky texture.
  4. Spoon warm compote over pancakes or bread and serve immediately.

🛒 Plant Cherry of the Rio Grande

📚 Learn more:


Eugenia aggregata - Cherry of the Rio Grande in Plant Encyclopedia
Don't plant cherries until you see this one!
Ten best fruit trees to grow in Florida and Southern landscapes. Tropical Cherries: Eugenias

#Food_Forest #Recipes

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Date: 25 May 2026

Why Gardeners Are Secretly Obsessed With This Rare Brazilian Giant Walking Iris

Iris Regina - Neomarica caerulea

🔤 Why Gardeners Are Secretly Obsessed With This Rare Brazilian Giant Walking Iris



Meet Iris Regina - Neomarica caerulea: the rare, salt-tolerant Brazilian walking iris that blooms in under a year and thrives in shady, sandy soil where other tropicals fail.

One look at Iris Regina - and it's easy to see why tropical plant collectors quietly become obsessed with it. It pairs elegant, hand-painted blue-violet flowers with arching, sword-like leaves that instantly give your garden a lush, structural look.
But the real magic of this unusual Brazilian species isn't just its beauty - it's the fact that it thrives exactly where other tropicals fail.

The Plant That Thrives on Neglect (and Salt Air)



Originally discovered growing near the ocean in Brazil, Iris Regina naturally adapted to conditions that would frustrate most gardeners. Thriving in sandy soil, deep shade, and coastal salt spray, this plant is remarkably easygoing. While most flowering tropicals demand rich soil and perfect drainage, Iris Regina handles difficult planting zones with absolute grace.

👉 Quick Care Tip: While it loves moist, well-drained soil, overfeeding is a mistake. Too much fertilizer will give you massive leaves but fewer flowers!

Blooms in Less Than a Year



One of the most surprising traits of Iris Regina is how quickly it matures. Many rare ornamental plants test a gardener's patience for years before ever showing a bud. Fresh seedlings of this species, however, can reach blooming size in less than a year - an absolute rarity for a tropical perennial with such exotic flowers.

The blooms look like a cross between a rare orchid and a delicate iris. While individual flowers are short-lived, mature clumps continuously push out new blooms throughout the warm season, especially when kept evenly moist.

Light and Cold Tolerance: What You Need to Know



· Light: For the best foliage color and maximum blooming power, give it morning sun and afternoon shade. It can handle more sun, but only if you keep up with watering.
· Cold Hardiness: Iris Regina is comfortable down to about 30F. In warmer parts of Florida (Zones 9b-11), it performs beautifully outdoors year-round.
· Cold Climates: If you live in a freeze-prone zone, it makes an exceptional container plant. Just wheel it to safety when a freeze threatens.
Propagation: It's incredibly easy to divide, or you can grow it reliably fast from fresh seed.

25 Years of History: The Top Tropicals Connection



For us at Top Tropicals, Iris Regina isn't just another botanical listing - it carries a piece of our history. This specific variety was introduced by the legendary tropical plant collector Sid Gardino, who named it after his wife, Regina.

Sid and Regina have been longtime friends of Top Tropicals for over a quarter of a century. In fact, some of the very first plants in our nursery’s collection came from them more than 25 years ago. Plants like Iris Regina represent the early, passionate era of Florida plant collecting - treasures shared between friends long before rare plants became viral internet trends.

Today, Iris Regina still feels like a hidden gem compared to flashy orchids or massive aroids. But if you are looking for something elegant, salt-tolerant, and surprisingly easy to grow, this Brazilian walking iris might just become your favorite plant in the garden.

🛒 Get Iris Regina for a low-maintenance, always-blooming showstopper

📚 Learn more:

Walking Iris Plant Facts

Botanical name: Neomarica caerulea
Also known as: Walking Iris, Twelve apostles, Apostle Plant, Iris Regina
USDA Zone: 8 - 11
Highligths Small plant 2-5 ftSemi-shadeShadeFull sunWatering: Regular. Let topsoil dry slightlyBlue, lavender, purple flowersSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short timeFlood tolerant plantSeaside, salt tolerant plant
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· Neomarica caerulea - Iris Regina in Plant Encyclopedia
· What flower is perfect for coastal gardens
· What is the best plant for a carefree flower border

#Container_Garden #Shade_Garden #How_to #Discover


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Date: 23 May 2026

Avocado Fantastic: the hidden world beyond green and black

Avocado Fantastic fruit

Avocado Fantastic fruit

Avocado Fantastic tree

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

🛒 Explore cold hardy Avocado varieties

📚 Learn more:


· Avocado Variety Guide: Snack or Guacamole? Collector's inspiration
· Cold-hardy avocado survival groups - what the numbers really mean
· How to protect Avocado from cold and how hardy is it?
· Avocado that laughs at frost: Mexicola Grande for cooler climates
· Cold hardy Avocado Joey - you eat it with the skin

📖 Our Book: Avocado Variety Guide, Snack or Guacamole?
·
Hard copy · PDF File Download

#Food_Forest #Avocado #Discover

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Date: 20 May 2026

Why in Thailand Wrightia religiosa is near all temples and homes

Wrightia religiosa - Sacred Buddhist, plant

Wrightia religiosa - Sacred Buddhist, plant

Wrightia religiosa - Sacred Buddhist, flowers

Wrightia religiosa - Sacred Buddhist, flowers

Wrightia religiosa - Sacred Buddhist, flower close up

Wrightia religiosa - Sacred Buddhist, flower close up

🏯 Why in Thailand Wrightia religiosa is near all temples and homes



In Thailand, you will smell the Water Jasmine before you see it. Trace that soft, fruity, jasmine-like fragrance and you'll find Wrightia religiosa - an unassuming tropical shrub with tiny white flowers hanging like pendants. Also called Sacred Buddhist, this beloved plant is everywhere in Southeast Asia, cherished for its rich cultural history and old-world charm rather than loud colors.

Sacred Buddhist Plant Facts

Botanical name: Wrightia religiosa, Echites religiosa
Also known as: Sacred Buddhist, Wondrous Wrightia, Wild Water Plum, Water Jasmine
USDA Zone: 9 - 10
Highligths Plant used for bonsaiLarge shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall tree 10-20 ftSmall plant 2-5 ftSemi-shadeFull sunWatering: Regular. Let topsoil dry slightlyWhite, off-white flowersPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsEthnomedical plant.
Plants marked as ethnomedical and/or described as medicinal, are not offered as medicine but rather as ornamentals or plant collectibles.
Ethnomedical statements / products have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. We urge all customers to consult a physician before using any supplements, herbals or medicines advertised here or elsewhere.Fragrant plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short timeFlood tolerant plantSeaside, salt tolerant plant
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💮 The Shrub of Buddhist Symbolism that Thai Temples Have Been Planting for Centuries

The species name religiosa is no accident. It literally refers to the plant’s long association with religious, spiritual, and cultural traditions across Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Singapore.

While the flowers themselves are visually simple, their unique growth habit has inspired generations of Buddhist symbolism. Unlike many flowers that point proudly toward the sky, the blooms of the Water Jasmine hang downward. In Thai culture, this downward-facing habit became a beautiful symbol of modesty and humility - a physical representation of bowing down rather than standing in pride.

Furthermore, many gardeners and monks associate the flower’s five distinct petals with foundational Buddhist virtues: wisdom, compassion, patience, kindness, and generosity. Whether ancient legend or folk interpretation, this cultural meaning has earned the plant a reputation as something sacred, making it a staple near homes and temple grounds.

💮 The Fragrance People Fall in Love With



Visually, Wrightia religiosa does not try to dazzle you with giant petals or wild, neon colors. Instead, its magic lies entirely in its scent.

The perfume it throws into the air is the real reason people become obsessed with it. It is a clean, intoxicating fragrance that drifts gracefully through the evening air. For anyone living in a warm climate, the best part is that the Water Jasmine is not a "one-and-done" bloomer. When the plant is happy, it flowers repeatedly and almost continuously throughout the year, meaning that incredible scent becomes a permanent fixture in your garden.

💮 From Temple Gardens to Bonsai Pots



Part of what makes Wrightia religiosa so widespread is its sheer versatility. It is an incredibly agreeable plant that adapts beautifully to whatever form a gardener desires. In Southeast Asia, you will see it styled as:
· A standalone specimen shrub
· A dense, fragrant privacy hedge
· A patio accent in containers
· A small, sculptural tree

It has also become an absolute classic in the tropical bonsai world. Because its branches are flexible, fast-growing, and highly responsive to pruning, even beginners can easily wire and shape young plants into twisted, artistic forms. Left to grow naturally, older plants develop a graceful, twiggy, and airy structure that looks naturally sculptural.

💮 The Fake-Dead Winter Quirk



Wrightia is easy to care for with standard sun and water, but it hates the cold (although survives it well). Below 65F, it abruptly drops all its leaves and looks completely dead. Many gardeners panic and throw it away - but it’s just resting. Simply bring container plants indoors for the winter. Once the warmth returns, it wakes up, flushes green, and resumes blooming.

💮 Subtle Beauty with Deep Roots



Some tropical plants impress with sheer size, but Wrightia religiosa does the opposite. Its beauty is quiet - thin branches, dangling white pendants, light green foliage, and a fragrance that gently fills a yard.

It is a plant with a few centuries of cultural history carried in its branches, and it is one of those rare garden gems you cannot truly appreciate until you experience its scent in person.

🛒 Plant the Sacred Buddhist and enjoy the magical aroma

📚 Learn more:


Wrightia religiosa and other wrightias in Plant Encyclopedia

#Discover #Perfume_Plants

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