Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

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

💮 Ready 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:
Jasmine species in Plant Encyclopedia
Hoa Mai and the Year of the Horse
2026: Year of the Fire Horse - time to grow bold, live free, and plant lucky
Year of the Fire Horse - what should you grow in 2026?
More #Horoscope info for plants and cats

#Horoscope #Perfume_Plants #Discover

Showy Jasmine Plant Facts

Botanical name: Chrysojasminum floridum, Jasminum odoratissimum, Jasminum floridum, Jasminum fruticans
Also known as: Showy Jasmine, Florida Jasmine, Yellow Jasmine, Fruity Jasmine
USDA Zone: 7 - 10
Highligths Plant used for bonsaiLarge shrub 5-10 ft tallVine or creeper plantSemi-shadeFull sunWatering: Regular. Let topsoil dry slightlyYellow, orange flowersPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsFragrant plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
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Date: 3 Feb 2026

Four popular plants of friendship, appreciation, and shared connection

Heliconia flower

Heliconia flower

Ixora flower

Ixora flower

Bougainvillea flower

Bougainvillea flower

Gardenia flower

Gardenia flower

💕 Four popular plants of friendship, appreciation, and shared connection



Not all love is romantic. Many tropical plants symbolize warmth, friendship, hospitality, and human connection.

❣️ 1. Gardenia


Gardenia symbolizes quiet devotion, gratitude, and unspoken affection. It is often given to express deep appreciation rather than dramatic romance.
👉 Gardenia gift

❣️ 2. Heliconia


With its interlocking bracts, heliconia represents unity, partnership, and celebration. It is often linked to joyful relationships and togetherness and is widely used as a long-lasting cut flower in tropical arrangements.
👉 Heliconia gift

❣️ 3. Bougainvillea


Bougainvillea symbolizes enduring love and protection - beauty supported by strength. It is often associated with commitment and resilience in relationships.
👉 Bougainvillea gift

❣️ 4. Ixora


Known in parts of Asia as the "flower of love", Ixora represents friendship, emotional closeness, and community bonds.
👉 Ixora gift

🛒 Explore gift plants
🎁 Get a Gift Card

📚 Learn more:


Valentines day Best Gift Plant Ideas
Valentine’s plants from around the world that symbolize love, connection, and appreciation
Eight favorite plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection

#Shade_Garden #Container_Garden

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Date: 17 Jan 2026

Ti plant leaf color meaning

Hawaiian Ti plant (Cordyline fruticosa)

Hawaiian Ti plant (Cordyline fruticosa)

🌈 Ti plant leaf color meaning



The Hawaiian Ti plant (Cordyline fruticosa) is more than just a colorful tropical accent. Across Polynesian, Hawaiian, and Southeast Asian cultures, the color of ti plant leaves has long been associated with different meanings, moods, and uses - both symbolic and practical.

Hawaiian Ti Leaf Plant Facts

Botanical name: Cordyline fruticosa, Cordyline terminalis
Also known as: Hawaiian Ti Leaf
USDA Zone: 10 - 11
Highligths Large shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall plant 2-5 ftSemi-shadeShadeFull sunWatering: Regular. Let topsoil dry slightlyOrnamental foliageUnusual colorPink flowersSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
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🌈 Green leaves
Green ti plants are linked to peace, balance, and steady growth. Traditionally, they were planted around homes for protection and good fortune. In the garden, green varieties are usually the toughest and most shade-tolerant.

🌈 Red and deep burgundy leaves
Red ti plants are associated with strength, power, and protection. In Hawaiian tradition, red ti leaves were believed to ward off negative energy and were often used in ceremonies. Garden-wise, deeper reds usually mean more sun exposure and stronger pigmentation.

🌈 Pink, magenta, and multicolor leaves
These colorful ti plants symbolize joy, celebration, and creativity. They are often used as ornamental focal points and in festive plantings. Variegated and pink types tend to prefer brighter light to keep their colors sharp.

🌈 Purple and dark-toned leaves
Purple ti plants are linked to mystery, spirituality, and transformation. Their dramatic color comes from high anthocyanin levels and usually intensifies in bright light with good nutrition.

🌈 Yellow or light variegation
Yellow tones often represent optimism and new beginnings. Plants with lighter variegation may grow a bit slower and need protection from harsh sun, but they add a softer contrast in tropical landscapes.

🌈 One practical note
Leaf color is influenced not just by variety, but also by light, temperature, and nutrition. Fading color usually means too little light or depleted soil, while rich, bold tones signal a happy plant.

Ti plant colors tell a story - part cultural tradition, part plant health, and part personal style in your garden.

🛒 Ti plants rainbow: collect them all

📚 Learn more:


Cordyline fruticosa in Plant Encyclopedia
Ti plant: bold color, easy care
Color that lasts year-round

#Container_Garden #Hedges_with_benefits #Shade_Garden #Discover #Horoscope

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Date: 31 May 2026

🔮 The Search for Enchanted Incense

Smokey  and  Sunshine  investigate  the  mystery  of  Enchanted  Incense,  a 
 fragrant  Cerbera  hybrid  from  Thailand,  using  photos,  maps,  and  botanical 
 clues.
Sunshine: John said it smelled like a thousand jasmines.
Smokey: And somehow that's all the information he brought back from Thailand.
Sunshine: He brought a photo, too.
Smokey: Excellent. We can begin our international manhunt.

Well, Smokey and Sunshine have closed the case and found the mystery plant. The cork board is coming down, the magnifying glass is back in the drawer, and the "Enchanted Incense" mug is finally empty. Now let's talk about the plant itself.

🌸 Some plants arrive with a label. Some arrive with a story.

Close-up  of  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted  Incense  flowers  showing  rich 
 reddish-brown  petals  with  soft  white  edges  and  bright  pink  flower  tubes.  The
    unusual  blooms  are  displayed  against  dark  foliage,  highlighting  their 
 exotic  shape  and  velvety  texture.

Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense - produces some of the most unusual fragrant flowers in the tropical garden. Its velvety reddish blooms, outlined in white and carried on vivid pink tubes, create an exotic display that looks hand-painted.

When our good friend John Mood returned from a plant conference in Thailand, he did not bring us a plant. He brought us a mystery.

John had spent decades growing and collecting rare tropical plants. When he said he had found something special, we paid attention.

On a visit to Chatuchak Market, one of the most famous plant markets in Asia, something stopped him. Not the flowers. The fragrance.

"I found a plant that smells stronger than a thousand jasmines," John told us.

That one sentence stayed with us for years.

He had photographs. He had his memory of that scent. What he did not have was a name. No tag. No seller information. Just the photos and the certainty that he had smelled something genuinely unusual.

So we started looking.

We showed the photographs around. We asked collectors. We compared flowers. Every lead turned into another question. But eventually, after years of searching on and off, we found it.

The mystery plant turned out to be an unusual Cerbera unlike anything we had grown before. Today we call it Enchanted Incense. Fragrance lovers recognized immediately what John had recognized in that Bangkok market. This was not just another pretty tropical flower.

🌸 The Plant

Full  view  of  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted  Incense  growing  in  a  nursery 
 container,  displaying  dramatic  dark  burgundy  foliage  with  wavy-edged  leaves 
 and  clusters  of  unusual  reddish-pink  flowers.  New  growth  emerges  in  rich 
 bronze  tones,  creating  a  striking  tropical  appearance.

Even when not in full bloom, Cerbera x manghas Enchanted Incense is a standout plant. Its glossy, deep burgundy foliage and bronze new growth create a bold tropical presence, while the unusual flowers add an extra layer of intrigue.

Visitors at our nursery still walk past it and stop. Not because they noticed the plant. Because they noticed something in the air and could not figure out where it was coming from.

The flowers start soft pink and white, then deepen to rich red and auve as they mature. They come in clusters, four to five inches across, and the fragrance they produce does not stay close to the flower. It moves. It fills the space around the plant. On a warm morning it can perfume an entire patio.

The foliage is worth mentioning too. Deep green leaves with burgundy and mauve tones that make it attractive even when it is not blooming. The growth habit is slow and slightly weeping, similar to plumeria, which is no coincidence since they are close relatives. Unlike plumeria, Enchanted Incense stays evergreen in warm climates.

It is a compact, slow-growing small tree that is happy in a container. That makes it practical for gardeners in colder climates who need to bring it in for winter, and for anyone who wants a fragrant plant near a seating area rather than somewhere across the yard.

🌸 Why We Grow It

Close-up  of  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted  Incense  flowers  nestled  among 
 dark  burgundy  foliage.  The  unusual  blooms  feature  velvety  reddish-brown 
 petals  edged  in  white,  emerging  from  vivid  pink  flower  tubes  and  surrounded 
 by  pale  star-shaped  calyces.

The flowers of Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense - look otherworldly. Deep reddish petals, bright pink tubes, and contrasting white edges combine to create one of the most distinctive fragrant blooms.

We grow thousands of plants, and most can be described in a sentence or two.

This one cannot.

A large Enchanted Incense grows right outside our office. Every year it reminds us why we spent so much time searching for it.

Visitors stop beside it and ask the same question: "What is that smell?"

They usually notice the fragrance before they notice the plant.

Some follow the scent across the nursery. Others stop in the middle of a conversation and start looking around. Nearly everyone ends up standing next to the tree trying to figure out where that incredible fragrance is coming from.

In a world full of beautiful tropical plants, Enchanted Incense remains one of the few that announces itself before you even see it.

That is why we love growing it.

Feature Description
Common Name Enchanted Incense
Botanical Name Cerbera x manghas
Origin Thailand
Flowers White to soft pink, deepening to red and pink
Fragrance Exceptional, far-reaching
Container Friendly Yes
Cold Tolerance USDA Zones 9-11 (Low 30s°F with caution)
Growth Habit Slow, compact, slightly weeping

🛒 Add Enchanted Incense to your collection

Growing Tips

Close-up  of  a  pink-flowering  form  of  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted 
 Incense,  featuring  velvety  rose-pink  petals  with  crisp  white  edges.  The 
 flower  is  surrounded  by  burgundy  foliage,  red  flower  buds,  and  pale  pink 
 star-shaped 
 calyces.

Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense can display remarkable variation in flower color. This form combines soft rose-pink blooms with white-edged petals and rich burgundy foliage, creating a striking contrast throughout the plant.
  • Light: Full sun is best (at least six hours daily). It will tolerate partial shade but blooms much more generously in good light.
  • Watering: Water regularly during warm weather. In cool weather and winter, keep the soil on the drier side. Overwatering when temperatures are low is the most common mistake.
  • Soil: Use a well-draining mix. This plant absolutely does not want wet feet.
  • Fertilizer: Feed with a Green Magic controlled-release fertilizer for flowering plants in spring, supplemented with occasional liquid fertilizer through the summer. For non-stop blooms without the risk of salt build-up in containers, we highly recommend Sunshine Boosters™. Read our Guide to Sunshine Boosters™ and Green Magic fertilizer
  • Winter Care: Bring it indoors when temperatures approach the mid-30s°F. The rootstock is fairly tough, but the foliage is not. Cold and wet conditions combined are the real risk.

One Last Thing

Macro  close-up  of  a  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted  Incense  flower  resting 
 against  a  person's  fingers  for  scale.  The  bloom  features 
 velvety  reddish-brown  petals  with  narrow  white  margins  and  a  fuzzy  bright 
 pink 
 center,  revealing  the  intricate  details  of  this  unusual  tropical  flower.

A closer look reveals the remarkable details of Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense. The velvety petals, crisp white edging, and fuzzy pink center give the flower an appearance unlike anything else in the garden. And then comes the scent...

John came back from Bangkok with a few photographs and a fragrance he could not forget. It took us years to track down the plant behind that memory. We have never regretted a single minute of the search.

Sunshine: So after all those years, what's the answer?
Smokey: Stand next to the plant.
Sunshine: That's it?
Smokey: The fragrance explains the rest.

🛒 Grow Enchanted Incense

📚 Learn more from our Blog

Mature  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted  Incense  growing  as  a  landscape  tree 
 beside  a  house.  The  plant  displays  glossy  dark  green  leaves,  bronze-toned 
 new  growth,  and  clusters  of  flowers  and  buds  against  a  bright  blue 
 sky.

A closer look reveals the remarkable details of Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense develops into an attractive small tree with lush evergreen foliage and colorful new growth. In the landscape, it combines year-round structure with clusters of bright redding-pink fragrant flowers that stand out beautifully against the glossy leaves.

Date: 24 Sep 2023

Go Bananas!
10 good reasons to plant bananas in your garden

Cat  with  bananas  in  refrigerator

Adding banana plants to your subtropical garden or plant collection can enhance the aesthetics of your outdoor and indoor space, provide fresh and nutritious fruits, and offer a fun gardening experience with relatively low maintenance requirements. It's a delightful way to connect with nature and enjoy the benefits of homegrown produce.

1. Tropical Ambiance: Banana plants bring a touch of the tropics to your subtropical garden. Their large, lush leaves create a lush and exotic atmosphere that can transform your garden into a tropical paradise.

2. Homegrown Flavor: Growing your own banana trees allows you to enjoy the freshest, most flavorful bananas right from your garden. Homegrown bananas often have a superior taste compared to store-bought varieties.

3. Nutritional Benefits: Bananas are packed with essential vitamins, minerals, and dietary fiber. By cultivating your own banana trees, you gain access to a nutritious and healthy snack option right in your backyard.

4. Quick Results: Banana plants are known for their fast growth. In subtropical climates, they can produce fruit in as little as one to two years. This means you don't have to wait long to savor the fruits of your labor!

5. Low Maintenance: Banana trees are relatively low-maintenance once established. They require regular watering, but their hardy nature makes them a relatively easy addition to your garden. They are not messy in a landscape.

6. Versatility: Bananas offer versatility in your garden. You can choose from dessert bananas for snacking, cooking bananas like plantains for culinary experiments, or even ornamental banana varieties to enhance your garden's aesthetics. There are so many varieties to enjoy! You can't find this big selection in a grocery store.

7. Sustainable Living: Growing your own bananas reduces your reliance on store-bought produce, contributing to a more sustainable lifestyle. It also minimizes the carbon footprint associated with transporting fruits to market.

8. Educational Value: Cultivating banana plants can be an educational experience for both adults and children. It offers insights into tropical horticulture and can foster an appreciation for gardening and botany.

9. Landscaping Appeal: Beyond their fruit-bearing potential, banana plants add visual interest to your garden. Their unique form and striking leaves make them an excellent choice for landscaping and providing shade in your outdoor space.

10. Resilience: While bananas thrive in tropical conditions, many banana varieties are hardy enough to withstand cooler climates, making them a durable addition to your garden.

bananas  and  banana  trees