How to tell the difference between Jasmine Sambac Varieties
Jasminum Sambac varieties
⏳ How to tell the difference between Jasmine Sambac Varieties
💮 Jasminum Sambac is hands down the most fragrant jasmine in existence - and the most popular among tropical gardeners and plant collectors.
💮 Native to India, it's the source of jasmine perfume oil and the signature ingredient in jasmine tea.
💮 This plant comes in several varieties, each with unique flower size, shape, and growth habit - ranging from compact shrubs to vigorous bushes and climbing vines. It takes both sun and shade and makes a perfect container plant and indoor plant favorite.
💮 All varieties of Sambac are equally fragrant. To get more flowers, just use Sunshine Pikake plant booster and enjoy the perfume all day long!
💮 At Top Tropicals, we grow every known variety of Jasminum sambac in cultivation:
Arabian Nights - compact slow growing shrub with small delicate flowers
Belle of India - compact vine with long elegant petals, shade lover
Adenium Mad Lady
Twisted, expressive petals with a wild, unpredictable look.
Adenium Moung VN
Adenium Petch Pratum
Adenium Maneenate
Adenium Ramruay
Adenium Swan and Dragon
Adenium rainbow: 9 dark tones that don’t look real 🌈
Some adeniums are bright and cheerful.
And some look like they came from another planet.
This set leans into those deep, off-purple, almost unreal shades. Every one is different, but they all share that exotic, hard-to-describe look.
💡 Container tip
Adeniums do best in shallow containers, especially unglazed clay pots.
Clay helps in a few ways:
- it dries faster than plastic
- provides better air flow to roots
- keeps the plant stable as the caudex gets heavy
Avoid oversized pots. Keep it just slightly larger than the root ball.
Secret of a Big Caudex:
When repotting, raise the caudex a little each time.
That’s the simple trick to developing that thick, exposed base everyone loves.
🌸 Today's featured adeniums
✦ Blue Diamond: Cool-toned, almost metallic shades - very unusual in color. ✦ Musk: Modern-looking bloom with a bold, unconventional feel. ✦ Hong Hern: Elegant form with deep tones and a refined structure. ✦ Mad Lady: Twisted, expressive petals - looks a bit wild and unpredictable. ✦ Moung VN: Soft purple shades with a smooth, balanced look. ✦ Petch Pratum: Rich color with a jewel-like quality - name reflects that. ✦ Maneenate: Layered bloom with a more intricate, detailed structure. ✦ Ramruay: Associated with wealth and prosperity - strong presence. ✦ Swan and Dragon: Myth-inspired look with a dramatic, flowing form.
This kind of set is where collecting gets interesting - not just colors, but personality in each plant.
And once you start noticing these darker tones - you start seeing them differently everywhere.
Vanilla planifolia Vine, Flower, and Cured Vanilla
Beans
How to Grow Vanilla: quick how-to
Vanilla is not complicated, but it does have preferences. Start with a
pot and regular, well-draining mix. It does not need anything exotic. Give
it:
Bright, indirect light
Warm temperatures
Good humidity
Air movement
Most importantly, give it something solid to climb. A wooden trellis, a log,
or a burlap-covered board works well. The surface should be porous so the
aerial roots can grip.
As it grows, guide the vine gently. You can prune it to control size.
Vanilla is slow to mature. That is normal.
The Bloom Secret
Vanilla does not bloom just because it looks healthy. It blooms when it
feels secure.
This is a climbing orchid. It must attach firmly to a solid, porous
support such as a wood log, trellis, or burlap-covered board. When the
aerial
roots grip and the plant reaches maturity, flowering becomes possible.
Once the flowers appear, they usually need to be hand pollinated to
produce pods. Each flower stays open for only a short time, so timing
matters.
How to pollinate vanilla: In this video, we show you
exactly how to pollinate vanilla step by step
❓Vanilla care: quick FAQ
Does Vanilla planifolia really produce vanilla
beans?
Yes. Vanilla planifolia is the commercial source of vanilla. After
flowering, it can form long green pods (vanilla beans). The aroma develops
later during curing.
What is the secret to getting vanilla to bloom?
Let it climb. Vanilla is a climbing orchid and usually will not bloom until
its aerial roots attach firmly to a solid, porous support like a wood log,
trellis, or burlap-covered board.
Do I need to pollinate vanilla flowers?
Yes. In most home growing conditions, vanilla flowers must be hand
pollinated to produce pods. Each flower is open for only a short time, so
timing matters.
Can I grow vanilla indoors?
Yes, if you can provide bright, indirect light, warmth, humidity, and a
support to climb. A sunny room with filtered light and a trellis or log can
work well.
What should I use for support?
Use a sturdy trellis, a wood log, or a burlap-covered board. The key is a
porous surface that aerial roots can grip. Avoid chemically treated wood.
Check out this very unusual way to
grow Vanilla Orchid over a wall.
What potting mix should I use for Vanilla plant?
Start in a pot with a regular, well-draining potting mix such as Sunshine
Abundance. As the plant matures, it relies more on its support and
aerial roots than the soil.
What fertilizer should I use? Sunshine
Boosters Orchidasm is formulated specifically for orchids and will work
perfecty for Vanilla orchid as well.
How big will it get?
As big as you let it. Train it and prune it. Vanilla grows according to the
structure and space you provide.
How long until it flowers?
Typically a few years. Vanilla is a long-term project, but it is very
rewarding once established.
For Collectors and Enthusiasts:
Vanilla dilloniana in Bloom - Rare Florida Native
Orchid
We also offer Vanilla dilloniana, a rare
Florida native species with distinctive flowers.
One remarkable specimen of this species, grown by our friend Robert
Riefer, became so vigorous over many years that it outgrew a 100 gallon
container and was eventually moved into a 250 gallon pool on wheels.
The plants we offer are propagated from that very specimen:
That kind of growth reflects deliberate cultivation and ideal conditions
- not something that happens unintentionally.
Vanilla grows according to the space and structure you provide.
For gardeners focused on producing real vanilla beans for the kitchen,
Vanilla planifolia remains the right place to
start.
By Tatiana Anderson, Horticulture Expert at Top
Tropicals with Smokey & Sunshine help
Adeniums blooming inside the Top Tropicals greenhouse
during the record freeze of February 2026 - protected from the cold, kept
above 40F, and fed with liquid Sunshine
Megaflor. They responded with a spectacular, synchronized winter bloom.
Quite a surprize!
✅ Simple rules that actually make them bloom and grow well
Light - The more light, the better the growth and
flowering. Full sun is ideal, but in very hot climates, filtered
bright light keeps plants looking healthier.
Water - Water well, then let soil dry on the surface.
Sitting in wet soil damages roots, but letting plants dry
out too often can push them into early dormancy.
Pot and shaping - Use a shallow pot with excellent
drainage. To
develop a sculptural caudex, lift the plant slightly each time you repot and
remove some of the
top soil so upper roots become exposed. Over time, this creates a thicker,
more prominent base.
Healthy adeniums start with the right foundation - a
fast-draining soil mix and careful watering only when
dry to avoid caudex rot.
Cold hardiness - Adeniums are tropical and do not
tolerate frost. Keep above 40 F. Brief drops to mid 30s may be tolerated if
dry, but cold and wet conditions can damage or kill the plant. In cooler
climates, bring indoors or
protect during cold nights.
Indoor winter care - Move plants indoors before cold
nights. Place in the brightest spot possible, ideally a south-facing window.
Or use
additional lighting. Water very lightly and less often, as growth slows. Do
not fertilize during dormancy. Some
leaf drop is normal in winter.
Freshly grafted adeniums in
dormancy - a crucial resting phase. Keep watering low (once a month) and
avoid overcare; this is the time to let them rest and etablish.
Feeding - Adeniums respond best to liquid fertilizer.
We apply Sunshine
Megaflor Booster with each watering throughout the year. During
dormancy, watering is reduced, so fertilizer use decreases accordingly.
Consistent, light feeding promotes strong roots, a thicker caudex, and
improved
flowering.
Pruning - For multiple blooms, regular pruning is
essential. After flowering, cut back long or leggy growth to stimulate
branching. Each new branch can produce more buds, leading to a much fuller
bloom in the next cycle.
Pruned vs. unpruned - the difference is clear. The four plants on the left
were trimmed 6 months ago, while the two on the right were not. Same
species,
very different results.
These Adeniums are screaming for pruning so they can bush out and produce
more blooms
Date: 22 Oct 2025
💞 Cassia or Bauhinia?
Looking for a small tree that blooms like fireworks but still fits on
your patio? We hear this question all the time at Top Tropicals: Cassia or
Bauhinia? Both are tropical showstoppers, but they shine in very different
ways.
🌞
Cassias: Sunshine Fireworks
Cassia trees
are some of the most rewarding tropical bloomers you can
grow. Fast-growing, free-flowering, and surprisingly cold-tolerant, they
thrive in full sun and summer heat. Their bright clusters come in shades of
yellow, orange, pink, red, and even multicolor blends. The famous Rainbow
Cassias
show swirls of coral, gold, and rose on the same tree, creating a living
fireworks display.
Cassias can also be grown in pots with pruning and
patience. Once mature, they reward you with breathtaking color that turns
any patio
or pool deck into a tropical show. Most showy cassias (numbers correspond to
the photos in the collage above):
Cassia
bicapsularis (Butterfly Bush) - is a fast-growing,
low-maintenance shrub covered in bright yellow, butterfly-like blooms from
fall
through winter.
Cassia roxburghii (Ceylon Senna) - graceful tree with spreading,
drooping branches appearing to be overweighed by its wealth of clustering
red
blossoms.
Cassia
x nodosa (Pink Shower) - is a spectacular medium-sized, fast-growing
tree with cascading clusters of fragrant pink-and-white appleblossom blooms
in spring and summer.
Cassia fistula (Golden Shower) - to many tropical gardeners, the
most beautiful of cassias with masses of bright gold flower clusters appear
on
almost every branch.
Cassia javanica (Apple Blossom) - dazzles with dense clusters of
pink-to-white blossoms that change shades as they bloom, creating a
spectacular
display that lasts for months.
"Cassias love the heat and sunshine," says Tatiana
Anderson, Top Tropicals Plant Expert. "They are perfect for anyone
who wants big
bursts of color and doesn’t mind giving them space and light to grow."
Bauhinia Magic: Orchid-Like Blooms in a Compact Size
Bauhinia orchid trees: top left
– Bauhinia acuminata (Dwarf White Orchid Tree), middle left –
Bauhinia blakeana (Hong Kong Orchid Tree), bottom left – Bauhinia
monandra
(Napoleon’s Plume Orchid Tree), top right – Bauhinia
madagascariensis (Red Dwarf Orchid Tree), and bottom right – Bauhinia
tomentosa
(Yellow Orchid Tree)
Bauhinia trees
known as Orchid Trees, bring a touch of tropical luxury
to any space. Their butterfly-shaped leaves and orchid-like blossoms appear
in shades of red, pink, purple, white, and yellow, often lasting up to ten
months a year. Bauhinias are ideal for gardeners who want nonstop color in a
manageable size. Most species grow well in large pots and bloom young, often
within the first season.
The following compact varieties stay neat and flower almost
continuously in warm weather:
Bauhinia blakeana (Hong Kong Orchid Tree). A large tree in the
ground, but compact in pots if trimmed. Grafted trees flower right
away.
Winter bloomer, cold hardy to light frost.
The Hong Kong Orchid Tree is especially prized because it
is sterile and produces no messy seed pods, keeping patios clean. Grafted Buhinia
blakeana trees begin blooming while still small, making them perfect for
containers or tight spaces.
"Bauhinias are generous bloomers," Tatiana explains. "They respond
beautifully to regular feeding and full sun. If nights turn too cold, just
move the
pot to a sunny porch - they’ll keep their tropical charm most of the
year."
Give them full sun, regular fertilizer, and a well-drained
mix such as Sunshine
Abundance, and they will reward you with months of vivid
blooms. When nights turn too cold, simply move the pot to a sunny porch or
bright
window. Bauhinias adjust beautifully and keep their tropical grace year
after
year.
🎥
Watch Short Videos:
💲
Special Offer – 20% off Cassias and Bauhinias!
Get 20% OFF Cassias and Bauhinias with code
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Min order $100. Excluding S/H, valid online only,
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