Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 20 Dec 2025

☃️ Winter is choosing season

Smokey  the  tuxedo  cat  plans  spring  planting  on  a  laptop  plant 
 encyclopedia  while  Sunshine  the  ginger  cat  relaxes  by  a  fireplace  in  a  cozy 
 Christmas  living  room  with  tropical 
 plants.

Smokey: "December is for planning, not planting."
Sunshine: "Gift card now. Perfect plants later."
Smokey: "You surprise me sometimes. Must be the donuts."

This time of year always feels special to us. The days are shorter, the garden slows down, and we finally have a moment to pause, look at our wish lists, and dream a little about spring.

As gardeners, we know winter is not really planting season. It is choosing season.

It is when ideas take shape. When we think about what we want to grow next, what we want to add, and what we want to do differently when warm days return. That is why, in winter, the best plant gift is not a plant itself. It is the promise of one.

Cold weather and holiday shipping can make winter plant deliveries stressful, especially for tropical plants traveling north. A gift card lets plants wait for the right moment, and lets the gardener enjoy the fun part now: planning, choosing, and imagining.

It also solves something we all know too well. Every gardener is wonderfully different. Some dream of fruit trees, others of flowers, rare collectors, or easy growers. Some plant in containers, some in the ground. Guessing is hard. A gift card lets them choose exactly what fits their garden and their vision.

🎁 Holiday Gift Card Bonus

To make the season a little brighter, we are offering a holiday gift card bonus through 12/31/2025.

When you purchase a gift card, we add 15% extra value. Just add Christmas greeting in gift card message field. For example, a $100 gift card becomes $115 to spend.

The bonus value is not valid with other promotions or discounts. Gift cards cannot be used to purchase other gift cards. Bonus value is added at the time of purchase.

🎁 Get a gift card

Date: 27 Oct 2025

Large Grafted Mango Trees - Plant Now Before Winter!

Smokey  the  tuxedo  cat  prepares  to  plant  a  huge  mango  while  Sunshine  the
    ginger  tabby  relaxes  in  a  reclining  chair  sipping  coffee  as  a  truck  with  a 
 boom  crane  unloads  the  mango  beside  an  excavator  and  a  pile  of  mulch  in  a 
 sunny  tropical 
 garden.

"Next Time We'll Specify - A TREE!" - Smokey and Sunshine Plant a Giant Mango

🌡️ Why plant now?

Fall is the perfect time to plant tropical fruit trees. The soil is still warm, the air is mild, and your trees can quietly build strong roots. By spring, they’ll already be settled and ready to grow fast.

Imagine walking outside next summer and picking your own mangoes from a tree you planted this fall!

🎥 Check out Mango Tree Videos

Large  Pim  Seng  Mun  Mango  tree  full  of  heavy  green  fruit.

💲 Special Offer – 20% off Large Mango Trees: 7-15 gal

Get 20% OFF large grafted Mango trees (7-25 gal) with code

MANGO2025

Min order 150 (excluding S/H), valid online only, cannot be combined with other offers.

Hurry, offer expires November 03, 2025!

👉 Explore Mango Varieties:

7 gal pots - shipped to you

15 gal pots: pick up or delivery

25 gal pots: pick up or delivery

All Mango sizes

Date: 6 Dec 2025

🌿 Bring the Jungle Inside: Winter Survival Guide Part 1: Lighting ❄️

Smokey  the  taxedo  cat  adjusts  an  indoor  grow  light  while  Sunshine  the 
 ginger  tabby  sits  holding  a  hygrometer  he  does  not 
 understand.

Smokey: "Winter lighting must be precise. I need this light exactly at 14 inches."
Sunshine: "Sure. I am holding this… little number thing."
Smokey: "It reads humidity. Your main job is to look cute."

🌞 LIGHT, TEMPERATURE, PLACEMENT

Winter indoors is a different kind of battlefield. Dark rooms. Dry air. Cold windows. Random drafts. Weak light. Sad plants. We've been talking about keeping your tropicals alive outdoors previously. But some of you have no choice this time of year. You have to bring the jungle inside.

If that is you, then this is your plant survival guide.

Indoor  wall  of  tropical  houseplants,  including  cascading  vines,  variegated  foliage,  and  mixed  aroids  arranged  on  shelves.

☀️ LIGHT: THE WINTER LIFELINE

Light advice here comes straight from our in-house expert, Michael Dubinovsky, a high-tech lighting engineer with over 30 years of hands-on experience. If he says brightness beats hours, trust him.

Here is the truth: Indoor light in winter is 10 to 50 times weaker than outdoors. Short days. Low-angle sun. Windows filtering half the useful light. It all adds up.

Tropicals need 10 to 12 hours of real brightness. Winter sun cannot do that on its own. Not even in a big window. So we help them.

Use bright LED shop lights or utility lights. 5000K to 6500K CCT. High lumen output. Skip decorative bulbs. Skip purple grow fancy toy lights. If you want a single plant light, even a clamp lamp is fine if you screw in a bright daylight LED bulb.

Panels work best for plant clusters. Bars for shelves. Bulbs for single plants. And grouping plants under one bright panel always beats spreading them out.

Distance matters: keep LEDs about 12 to 18 inches above the leaves. Too close: leaf burn. Too far: stretching, weak stems.

Leaves reaching up? Light is too high or too weak. Leaves curling down? Light is too close.

If you want a reality check, download any smartphone lux meter app. Most indoor corners are 50 to 200 lux without supplemental light. Tropicals want much more

And a quick tip about windows: winter sun comes in sideways. A spot that looks bright at noon can go dull by 2 PM. Don't count of window light

Indoor  grow  setup  with  bright  LED  lights  illuminating  shelves  of  tropical  plants.

Bright light or long hours

People try to fix weak light by running it for 16 or 18 hours. That does not work. Plants care more about light intensity. A few hours of strong light beats all-day dim light. If the light is weak, adding more hours will not change anything except your electric bill.

Simple rule: Short duration but bright is always better than long duration but weak. - by Michael, Top Tropicals lighting expert

No need for fancy horticultural panels

You do not need purple grow lights. You do not need special horticultural fixtures. You do not need expensive panels unless you want real winter growth.

For winter plant holding till spring, the inexpensive solution works great:

  • Bright LED daylight bulbs (5000K to 6500K) from hardware store
  • High lumen output
  • Inexpensive clamp lamps
  • Aim directly at the plant from 12 to 18 inches

This setup keeps tropicals happy until spring without buying anything fancy. Save the money for soil, pots, or your next plant.

Indoor plant lighting safety note:

  • Use timers. Keep cords dry. Do not overload outlets.
  • Do not hang lights over humidifiers.
  • And do not put fixtures on piles of books to raise them. People do this.

Indoor  plants


✔️ WINTER INDOOR FAQ: TEMPERATURE AND PLACEMENT

Q: I am in Home Depot. Which light do I buy?
A: LED shop light, daylight color (5000K to 6500K), high lumens. Skip fancy plant bulbs.

Q: Can I use clamp lamps or floor lamps for plants?
A: Yes. Clamp lamps with a bright daylight LED bulb work great for winter holding.

Q: Do I need special horticultural grow lights?
A: No. A bright LED daylight bulb works fine for winter. Save the fancy lights for real growth projects.

Q: How far should the light be from the plant?
A: About 12 to 18 inches above the leaves. Too close burns. Too far stretches.

Q: Can I run weak lights for 18 hours to compensate?
A: No. Weak light plus long hours still equals a weak plant. Brightness matters more than hours.

Q: How do I know if a spot is bright enough?
A: Use a free phone lux app. Most indoor corners are much too dim for tropicals.

Q: I have a huge window. Why do I still need LEDs?
A: Indoor winter light is weak, short, and filtered by glass. Plants want intensity, not just a big window.

Q: My window faces north. Now what?
A: North windows are decorative only. Use supplemental lighting or move the plant.

📚 Learn more:


Date: 24 Apr 2026

Bold reds and ruby tones - plumerias with real intensity

Plumeria Maneerat

Plumeria Maneerat

Plumeria Siam Ruby

Plumeria Siam Ruby

Plumeria Red Siam

Plumeria Red Siam

Plumeria Kled Tabtim

Plumeria Kled Tabtim

Bold reds and ruby tones - plumerias with real intensity. Feeding tip 🌈

This set is all about depth, richness, and that unmistakable red glow. From ruby shades to deep velvety tones, these plumerias bring strong color and a luxurious feel - the kind that instantly draws your eye.

🌸 Today's featured plumerias:

  •  ✦ Plumeria Maneerat - golden-yellow center fading into creamy tones and strong pink to red edges, creating a radiant, glowing effect. Full, layered blooms with a rich, jewel-like look.
  •  ✦ Plumeria Siam Ruby - deep ruby pink petals with softer rosy highlights and a luminous center. Smooth, rounded blooms with a polished, gemstone feel.
  •  ✦ Plumeria Red Siam - rich, velvety red flowers with deep, consistent color and a soft satin finish. Dense clusters create a bold, classic tropical look.
  •  ✦ Plumeria Kled Tabtim - vibrant pink petals deepening toward a warm orange-red center, outlined with a clean white edge. Bright, refined, and glowing with a ruby-like effect.


💡 Plumeria tip: feeding for flowers



Plumerias are heavy feeders, especially when actively growing.
Use a fertilizer higher in phosphorus to push blooming.
Liquid feeding like Sunshine Megaflor can be used regularly, while a controlled release like Green Magic gives steady nutrition over time.

🛒 Shop Plumeria Collection and Enjoy the fragrant blooms

📚 Learn more:
🎥 How to get endless Plumeria Blooms

#Perfume_Plants #Container_Garden #How_to #Discover #PlumeriaRainbow

Plant Facts

Plumeria alba
Dwarf Plumeria
USDA Zone: 9-11
Large shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunModerate waterWhite, off-white flowersFragrant plant
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 20 Sep 2025

The more you learn - the more treats you earn

Cat Macaron and the Books at TopTropicals

Cat Macaron and the Books at TopTropicals

Cat Macaron on a sunny window

Cat Macaron on a sunny window

💻 The more you learn - the more treats you earn



"Hit the books, human, study hard, work harder! Somebody’s gotta bring home the tuna. Remember, the more you learn - the more treats you earn. I'll stay here supervising from the sunshine."


🐈📸 Cat Macaron and the Books at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden.

#PeopleCats

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals