Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 9 Jun 2026

This Forgotten Tropical Vine Has Huge Glossy Leaves and Smells Exactly Like Carnations: Faradaya splendida - the Glory Vine

This Forgotten Tropical Vine Has Huge Glossy Leaves and Smells Exactly Like Carnations: Faradaya splendida - the Glory Vine This Forgotten Tropical Vine Has Huge Glossy Leaves and Smells Exactly Like Carnations: Faradaya splendida - the Glory Vine This Forgotten Tropical Vine Has Huge Glossy Leaves and Smells Exactly Like Carnations: Faradaya splendida - the Glory Vine This Forgotten Tropical Vine Has Huge Glossy Leaves and Smells Exactly Like Carnations: Faradaya splendida - the Glory Vine

✨ This Forgotten Tropical Vine Has Huge Glossy Leaves and Smells Exactly Like Carnations: Faradaya splendida - the Glory Vine



Some plants become famous because everyone talks about them. Others quietly grow in the background - tougher, more resilient, and often far more impressive than the trendy varieties people rush to buy.
Faradaya splendida - the Glory Vine - belongs firmly in that second category.
This rare tropical climber boasts massive glossy leaves, carnation-scented white flowers, and enough vigor to quickly smother fences and pergolas. Yet, most gardeners have never heard of it simply due to a lack of mainstream exposure.

A Rainforest Native with Serious Presence


Native to the rainforests of Northern Queensland, Papua New Guinea, and nearby Pacific islands, the Glory Vine evolved to compete fiercely for sunlight. That edge explains its robust personality:

Fast Jungle Growth: This is no delicate creeper. Its thick, woody stems scale heavy garden structures with ease.
Dramatic Contrast:
Enormous, shiny leaves create a striking backdrop for pristine white blooms that practically glow against the dark foliage.

While Australian native plant enthusiasts love it, it remains a hidden gem to the rest of the gardening world.

Sensory Appeal: Carnation Scents and "Egg" Fruits



One of its best surprises is the fragrance. The large, snow-white, trumpet-shaped blooms carry a sweet, spicy scent identical to carnations, peaking in warm weather. While individual flowers are short-lived, the vine blooms heavily and repeatedly throughout summer.

Even out of bloom, the foliage delivers high-impact aesthetics. The lush leaves can reach nearly a foot long, effortlessly creating a dense rainforest look. Then come the strange fruits. After flowering, the vine produces large, egg-shaped white fruits resembling smooth potatoes. Hanging from the stems, they look so unusual that visitors often assume they are artificial.

Indigenous History and Ecological Deep Roots

Beyond beauty, Faradaya splendida carries a rich history. Among the Girramay people of northern Australia, the vine is known as Djungeen.

A Seasonal Clock: The dropping of its white fruits in October traditionally signaled that wild bush turkey nests contained eggs.
Traditional Fishing: The bark contains natural saponins (foaming compounds). Historically, it was used to temporarily stun fish in creeks without permanently polluting the water.

This is a storied rainforest species with deep ecological roots.

How to Grow the Glory Vine



The barriers to its popularity are availability and awareness. The name doesn't roll off the tongue like jasmine, and mainstream nurseries rarely stock it. However, source one from a specialty native nursery and the rewards are unmatched. It is:

· Evergreen and highly adaptable in tropical and subtropical climates.
· A magnet for local pollinators and butterflies.
· Exceptionally low-maintenance once established.

The only caveat? Space. This vine climbs with serious intent. Give it warmth, moisture, sunlight, and a sturdy structure, and it will reward you with a breathtaking jungle canopy.

One Discovery Away from Trend Status



Some plants stay hidden simply because a trendsetter hasn't spotlighted them online yet. The Glory Vine is a botanical treasure waiting to be rediscovered by modern landscaping. Until then, it remains a secret weapon for those in the know: a show-stopping vine that invariably makes people stop and ask, "What is that?"

🛒 Claim a Forgotten Treasure - only a few plants left in stock!

#Hedges_with_benefits #Discover #Perfume_Plants

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Date: 8 Jun 2026

Lady and Gentlemen

Lady and Gentlemen

👑 Lady and Gentlemen



"Being a lady is an attitude. Being a gentleman is a choice"

🐈📸 Cats Jim II, Klaksa and Jacques at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden.

#PeopleCats #Quotes

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Date: 8 Jun 2026

Pitaya Hana: dragon fruit beyond pink and white - A Collectors Guide

Pitaya Hana: dragon fruit beyond pink and white - A Collectors Guide

🍉 Pitaya Hana: dragon fruit beyond pink and white - A Collector's Guide



Most dragon fruit varieties are known for their colorful fruit. Hana stands out for something else - speed.
Originally discovered along Hawaii's famous Hana Highway on the island of Maui, Hana has earned a reputation as one of the fastest-growing dragon fruit varieties in cultivation. Under good conditions, the plant can grow more than six feet per year and may begin producing fruit in as little as 14 months from a cutting.


🔸 A dragon fruit with Hawaiian roots



Hana is a hybrid of Hylocereus undatus and Hylocereus monacanthus, combining vigorous growth with excellent fruit quality. The plant is easy to recognize by its relatively thin stems and unusually long thorns, giving it a different look from many modern dragon fruit varieties.

Like many Hawaiian treasures, Hana remains somewhat uncommon outside collector circles, making it a prized addition to a dragon fruit collection.

🔸 Fragrant flowers and dependable production



Hana is self-fertile, so a single plant can produce fruit without requiring another variety nearby. It is also known as an excellent pollen producer and is often used to help pollinate other dragon fruits.

Its large night-blooming flowers open after sunset, filling the air with a sweet fragrance. Unlike most dragon fruit flowers, Hana's blooms often show a delicate pink blush near the base of the petals, adding extra beauty to an already spectacular display.

🔸 Sweet flavor with a floral twist



The fruit are typically small to medium-sized, though some can exceed a pound. The skin is bright pink with green-tipped scales, while the flesh is white and filled with tiny black seeds.

What makes Hana memorable is its flavor. Many growers describe it as sweet melon with subtle floral notes and a pleasant rosy aftertaste - a combination that sets it apart from ordinary white-fleshed dragon fruits.

🔸 Why collectors love it



Fast growth, early fruiting, fragrant flowers, self-fertility, and unique flavor make Hana one of the most interesting dragon fruit varieties available to home gardeners. It is proof that some of the most rewarding dragon fruits are not always the biggest or the most colorful - sometimes they are simply the ones that grow fast and taste unforgettable. 👉 More...

🛒 Explore and collect Dragon Fruit varieties

📚 Learn more:

Pitaya Plant Facts

Botanical name: Hylocereus sp.
Also known as: Pitaya, Pitahaya, Dragon Fruit, Strawberry Pear
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Large shrub 5-10 ft tallVine or creeper plantSemi-shadeFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryWhite, off-white flowersThorny or spinyEdible plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short timeSeaside, salt tolerant plant
Get personalized tips for your region

· Dragon fruit Hylocereus in Plant Encyclopedia
· Why white-flesh Dragon fruits deserve more attention
· Pitaya Eureka Red: dragon fruit beyond pink and white
· Pitaya David Bowie: Dragon Fruit Beyond Pink and White
· A Quick Guide to Dragon fruit varieties: Red, White, Yellow, Purple and more...
· What is the best Dragon fruit with red flesh?
· Planting your own Dragon Fruit plantation
· Do-It-Yourself Support Structure for Dragon Fruit
· Why you need to grow your own dragon fruit
· Do red, white and yellow Dragon fruit taste differently?

#Food_Forest #Dragon_Fruit #Discover

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Date: 7 Jun 2026

🌿 The Vanilla Plant That Outgrew Its 100-Gallon Container.

Smokey  the  tuxedo  cat  and  Sunshine  the  orange  cat  inspect  a  giant 
 Vanilla  Godzilla  mother  plant  in  a  greenhouse.  Sunshine  sits  atop  a  massive 
 mound  of  leafless  vanilla  vines  holding  pruning  shears,  while  Smokey  takes 
 notes  among  dozens  of  young  vanilla  plants  propagated  from  the  giant 
 specimen.
Smokey: Is that really the entire mother plant?
Sunshine: Most of it.
Smokey: What do you mean "most of it"? And why are there donuts hanging from the plant?
Sunshine: We still haven't found the other end. The donuts attract pollinators.
Smokey: Donuts do not attract pollinators.
Sunshine: Then explain why I keep visiting the plant.
Smokey: You work here.
Sunshine: That's what the plant wants you to think. It's called "Intelligent Design" for a reason.

The plant Sunshine is perched on is not a hedge. It is not a wall. It is a single specimen of Vanilla dilloniana, Dillon's Vanilla, and it has a name: Intelligent Design. Unlike the familiar Vanilla planifolia — the commercial vanilla of ice cream and extract — dilloniana produces no leaves. The plant is essentially a green vine, photosynthesizing entirely through its stems. It is an unusual and striking grower, and in good conditions it can develop into an impressive, multi-branched specimen. It is classified as rare, and is considered vulnerable or endangered across portions of its native range.

Close-up  of  the  Vanilla  dilloniana  mother  plant,  Intelligent  Design, 
 growing  in  a  100-gallon  container.  Hundreds  of  leafless  green  stems  weave 
 together  into  a  dense  mound  covered  with  pale  green  orchid  flowers  featuring
    vivid  purple  and  white 
 centers.

Vanilla dilloniana in full bloom before its next major upgrade.

Intelligent Design was grown and lovingly tended for years by Robert Riefer, a grower who is both a good friend of Top Tropicals and one of the most dedicated orchid collectors we know. The mother plant of this specimen traces its origins back to 1927 - nearly a century of continuous cultivation.

In 2011, the American Orchid Society recognized this remarkable plant with a Certificate of Horticultural Merit (CHM), one of the society's formal awards for plants of exceptional quality.

By 2017, the plant had already become well known in the orchid and tropical plant community, appearing in a video that documented Robert moving it into a 100-gallon container. That video became something of a legend among collectors.

🎥 Video: the biggest Vanilla Orchid in the world moving to 100 gal pot

Then the plant kept growing.

It outgrew the 100-gallon container. Robert eventually moved it into a 250-gallon pool on wheels - because when a plant refuses to stop, you give it room.

The  Vanilla  dilloniana  mother  plant,  Intelligent  Design,  growing  in  a 
 massive  250-gallon  container  on  wheels,  with  thousands  of  leafless  green 
 stems  forming  a  dense  mound  covered  in  small  orchid 
 flowers.

The move to a custom 250-gallon container allowed continued growth and flowering.

The plant is currently on display at Edison Ford Winter Estates museum and botanical garden in Ft Myers, Florida, during the month of June, where recent photographs show it larger and more floriferous than ever. It is, as best anyone can determine, the largest known cultivated specimen of Vanilla dilloniana in the world. If you are local or visiting Florida, don't miss the chance to see this world-famous orchid in person. It is expected to continue blooming through June.

And here's the remarkable part: the Vanilla dilloniana plants available from Top Tropicals are propagated directly from this exact plant - Intelligent Design itself.

🛒 Add Intelligent Design Vanilla to your collection

👉 A Piece of Living History - Direct from the Source

Young  Vanilla  dilloniana  plants  at  different  stages  of  growth,  showing 
 rooted  cuttings  trained  on  bamboo  stakes  in  1-gallon  pots  alongside  a  larger
    wrap-around  specimen  filling  a  7-gallon  container  with  thick  leafless 
 vines.

Every legendary Vanilla dilloniana starts somewhere. On the left are young Vanilla dilloniana plants. On the right is a more mature specimen in a 7-gallon pot beginning the characteristic wrap-around growth habit that eventually transforms this unusual orchid into a sprawling, sculptural giant.

Vanilla dilloniana is a rare species, considered vulnerable to endangered across parts of its native Caribbean range. Plants with documented provenance - especially provenance tied to a named, award-winning, century-old specimen - are genuinely uncommon in cultivation.

What you would be growing is a direct descendant of the famous Intelligent Design mother plant, carrying the same historic lineage recognized by the American Orchid Society.

For collectors, opportunities to acquire plants with this kind of documented history are exceptionally rare.

🛒 Start your own Vanilla Godzilla

Growing Leafless Vanilla

Large  specimen  of  Vanilla  dilloniana  growing  in  a  wide  container 
 beneath  a  tree,  with  a  dense  mass  of  leafless  green  vines  covered  in  unusual
    pale  green  flowers  with  purple 
 centers.

This is how the legendary Vanilla dilloniana mother plant, Intelligent Design, started its world-famous "Godzilla" journey in 50-gallon container. It's in full bloom, and its leafless stems form a living sculpture, dotted with dozens of striking orchid flowers that make this rare vanilla one of the most unusual cultivated orchids in the world.
  • Light: Bright filtered light is ideal. Morning sun is generally well tolerated. Avoid intense afternoon sun, especially during summer.
    Ideal: Dappled shade, eastern exposure, greenhouse conditions, or 30-50% shade cloth.
  • Temperature: Warm-growing tropical species.
    Best: 70-95F
    Protect below: 40F
    Not frost tolerant.
  • Cold Protection: In USDA Zones below 10, grow in a container and move indoors or to a protected greenhouse before temperatures drop below 40F.
  • Humidity: Prefers moderate to high humidity with good air circulation. Avoid cold, stagnant, damp conditions.
  • Watering: Water thoroughly, then allow the potting mix to partially dry before watering again. Do not keep constantly wet. In cool weather and winter, keep the soil on the drier side. Overwatering when temperatures are low is the most common mistake.
  • Potting Mix: Plant in a very fast-draining medium.
    Recommended: Top Tropicals Abundance Mix.
    The open structure allows excellent root aeration while retaining enough moisture for healthy growth.
  • Support & Growth Habit: Unlike most vanilla orchids that are trained vertically on posts or trellises, Vanilla dilloniana can be grown using the "Intelligent Design" method. Start with a sturdy support while the plant is young, then allow the stems to wrap around themselves in wide circles. As new growth emerges, continue guiding the vines around the container. Over time, the plant forms an impressive sculptural mound of intertwined stems.
  • Container Growing: Excellent for wide containers. The larger the mass of stems becomes, the more impressive the display and the greater the flowering potential. Unlike traditional vanilla culture, extensive vertical space is not required.
  • Repotting: Move to progressively larger containers as needed. Rather than growing upward indefinitely, the plant can continue expanding into a larger circular mass, making it well suited for long-term container culture.
  • Fertilizing: Feed lightly but consistently during active growth.
    Recommended: Sunshine Booster™ Orchidasm.
    Apply according to label directions every 2-4 weeks during warm growing weather. Reduce feeding during cool periods or when growth slows. Read our Guide to Sunshine Boosters™
  • Growth Rate: Moderate to fast under warm conditions. Established plants can branch freely and become surprisingly large over time.
  • The Flowers: Pale green to yellow-green flowers with a deeply fluted reddish-purple lip and yellow crest. Mature plants in bloom are highly prized by orchid collectors.
  • Collector Appeal: Unusual leafless growth habit. Historic provenance. Highly desirable among orchid collectors.

Why Is It Called "Intelligent Design"?

Side-by-side  comparison  of  a  young  Vanilla  dilloniana  in  a  7-gallon 
 pot.  The  left  image  shows  the  plant  beginning  to  wrap  around  the  container, 
 while  the  right  image  shows  the  same  plant  later  forming  a  dense  ball  of 
 leafless  green  vines  as  it  continues  its  characteristic  growth 
 habit.

The making of Intelligent Design. As Vanilla dilloniana grows, its long leafless stems naturally wrap around themselves, creating a dense sculptural mass of living vines. Even in a 7-gallon pot, the plant is already beginning to develop the unusual growth pattern that would eventually make its famous mother plant one of the largest cultivated specimens of its species.

The famous mother plant was named Intelligent Design by its grower, Robert Riefer. After decades of growth, countless blooms, container upgrades, and an apparent determination to occupy every available square foot of greenhouse space, the name seemed increasingly appropriate.

Unlike commercial vanilla, Vanilla dilloniana is grown primarily as a collector's orchid. Its leafless, sculptural stems create a living tangle of green architecture unlike almost any other cultivated vanilla species.

Ready to grow this remarkable Vanilla dilloniana? Start your own chapter in the story of Intelligent Design.

📚 Learn more from our Blog

🛒 Order Legendary Leafless Vanilla Dilloniana

Close-up  of  Vanilla  dilloniana  flowers  blooming  along  the  edge  of  a 
 large  container,  showing  pale  green  star-shaped  petals  with  striking  purple 
 and  white  centers  against  a  tangle  of  leafless  green 
 vines.

The unusual flowers of Vanilla dilloniana emerge directly from its leafless stems, creating a stunning contrast of pale green petals and vibrant purple throats.
Smokey: We cannot guarantee that your plant will eventually require a 250-gallon pool on wheels.
Sunshine: We also cannot rule it out.
Smokey: Officially, we cannot confirm that the plant possesses intelligence.
Sunshine: The evidence is mounting.
Smokey: What evidence?
Sunshine: It convinced humans to build larger containers, move it into a 250-gallon pool on wheels, transport it to museum exhibitions, and place its agents in collections across the country.
Smokey: That's called excellent horticulture.
Sunshine: That's exactly what the Intelligent Design plant wants you to think.

Date: 7 Jun 2026

What do we do when the world becomes too gray

What do we do when the world becomes too gray

🎇 What do we do when the world becomes too gray



🐈 Sunshine: Smokey, what do we do when the world becomes too gray?

🐈 Smokey: Plant a tree.

🐈 Sunshine: And if that does not help?

🐈 Smokey: Plant another one.

🐈 Sunshine: And eat a donut.

🐈 Smokey: Not strictly necessary, but statistically beneficial.

👉 Continue reading the whole story...

🛒 Plant a tree

📚 Learn more:


· About Smokey & Sunshine
· Smokey & Sunshine interview

#PeopleCats

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