Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 20 Jan 2026

7 steps for a care-free Spanish Tamarind - the easiest rare fruit to grow

Vangueria infausta (Spanish Tamarind, Wild Medlar)

Vangueria infausta (Spanish Tamarind, Wild Medlar)

🍊 7 steps for a care-free Spanish Tamarind - the easiest rare fruit to grow



Yes, it can handle light frost - Vangueria infausta (Spanish Tamarind, Wild Medlar) - we just discovered it can handle cold snaps! After a few cold nights in January, our young tree planted just a few months ago, still looks happy and strong!
If you are looking for a tough little fruit tree that thrives on neglect but gives you something truly special in return - try this rare, compact fruit tree. Spanish Tamarind is native to southern Africa, it is drought-tolerant, pest-resistant, and surprisingly cold-hardy once established - making it a great choice even for gardeners in borderline zones.

Here’s how to grow this resilient gem:

🌞 Sun and soil



Spanish Tamarind loves full sun, but will tolerate light shade. It isn’t picky about soil as long as it drains well - sandy, rocky, or loamy, it will grow just fine. No special amendments needed.

💧 Watering



Once established, it's very drought tolerant, but young trees need regular watering to develop a deep root system. In containers, water when the top inch of soil is dry. In the ground, water deeply but infrequently.

❄️ Cold tolerance



Now for the surprise: while it’s considered a tropical fruit, Wild Medlar can handle brief dips into the mid-30s F without damage, especially when mature and dormant. In Sebring, FL, we’ve seen this tree shrug off light frosts with no protection!
And what makes this even more impressive? The tree has beautiful, lush velvet leaves - soft to the touch and tropical in appearance - yet surprisingly hardy for such large, tender-looking foliage.
· Young plants should be protected the first couple winters
· Grow in containers if you’re in USDA zone 8 or lower
· A little mulch around the base helps stabilize soil temps in winter

Growing in pots



This tree is very compact and does well in containers. Use a large, well-drained pot and a loose soil mix. Keep it outside in spring through fall, then bring it indoors before a hard frost. It grows slowly and stays compact for years, making it a great fit for patios or balconies.

🍊 When to expect fruit



With enough sun and time, your tree can start fruiting in 2-3 years. Mature trees can bear 20-40 small round fruits per season, ripening to a golden-brown with a tangy-sweet flavor. The fruiting season may vary depending on your local climate, but typically occurs in late summer to fall.

🛠 Maintenance? Almost none.


· No special pruning needed (except to shape)
· No major pests or diseases reported
· Tough and low-maintenance in the landscape

🏆 Final thought: grow it for the surprise



Spanish Tamarind - Wild Medlar - is a tree that rewards patience. It's unusual, beautiful in its own scruffy way, and packs a punch with cold tolerance, drought resistance, and tasty fruit. Spanish Tamarind belongs in every experimental garden or food forest - especially if you love growing things no one else in the neighborhood has.

🛒 Add rare Spanish Tamarind to your rare fruit collection

📚 Learn more:

Wild Medlar Plant Facts

Botanical name: Vangueria infausta
Also known as: Wild Medlar, Spanish Tamarind
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Small tree 10-20 ftFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryEdible plantDeciduous plantEthnomedical 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.Subtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
Get personalized tips for your region

Vangueria infausta - Spanish Tamarind in Plant Encyclopedia
The wild fruit with a secret: health benefits of rare Spanish Tamarind - the exotic fruit you've never heard of

#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover

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Date: 21 Jan 2026

Ice Cream Bean cool fluff: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Ice Cream Bean cool fluff

Ice Cream Bean cool fluff

Ice cream bean tree (Inga edulis) - fruit

Ice cream bean tree (Inga edulis) - fruit

🍴 Ice Cream Bean Cool Fluff

Ingredients

  • Fresh Ice Cream Bean pulp (Inga edulis)
  • Crushed ice
  • Optional: lime wedge or mint leaf for garnish

Instructions

  1. Open ripe Ice Cream Bean pods and scoop out the sweet white pulp.
  2. Remove and save the seeds if you want to plant more Ice Cream Bean trees.
  3. Chill the pulp for 20 to 30 minutes.
  4. Serve the chilled pulp over crushed ice as a natural shaved-ice dessert.

🌿 About the plant:


Ice cream bean (Inga edulis) produces long pods filled with sweet, cottony white pulp surrounding dark seeds. The flavor is mild, vanilla-like, and naturally creamy. The pulp is eaten fresh and used as a natural dessert across South and Central America.

🌱 In the garden:


Inga edulis is a fast-growing tropical tree with lush foliage and nitrogen-fixing roots that improve soil health. It is a perfect tree for a quick shade solution in just one season. While large in the ground, it can be managed with pruning in home orchards.

🛒 Plant Ice Cream Bean tree

📚 Learn more:

Ice Cream Bean Plant Facts

Botanical name: Inga edulis, Inga feuilleei
Also known as: Ice Cream Bean, Inga, Guama, Guaba
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Large tree taller than 20 ftFull sunWatering: Regular. Let topsoil dry slightlyWhite, off-white flowersEdible plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
Get personalized tips for your region

Ice Cream Bean tree (Inga edulis) in Plant Encyclopedia
Did you know that ice cream actually grows on a tree?
What does Ice Cream Bean fruit taste like?
Ice Cream Bean Tree: Eating the fruit and planting the tree

#Food_Forest #Recipes

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Date: 25 Jan 2026

Collecting clerodendrums: big color, little effort

Clerodendrum collage

Clerodendrum collage

🎨 Collecting clerodendrums: big color, little effort



🎨 Collector hook


If you love plants that look rare, unusual, and a little dramatic - but do not want high-maintenance divas - Clerodendrums belong in your collection.
Clerodendrums are a surprisingly diverse group of plants, ranging from flowering vines to shrubs and even small trees. What they all share is bold, colorful blooms and an easygoing nature that makes them far less fussy than they appear. This combination of exotic looks and forgiving care is exactly why collectors gravitate toward them.
Many clerodendrums bloom repeatedly through the year in warm climates, and several tolerate lower light better than most flowering plants. That makes them flexible - happy in the garden, in containers, on patios, or even indoors near a bright window. Their flowers come in striking combinations of red, white, blue, pink, and purple, often with unusual shapes that stop people mid-walk.

🎨 Why clerodendrums earn collector status



✦ Uncommon, eye-catching flowers
✦ Long or repeat bloom cycles in many varieties
✦ Vines, shrubs, and small trees in one genus
✦ Excellent performance in containers
✦ More tolerant of lower light than expected

🎨 Clerodendrum care made simple



Give clerodendrums bright filtered light to partial sun, regular watering with good drainage, and light feeding during active growth. A little pruning keeps them tidy and encourages fresh blooms. That is it. No complicated routines, no constant fixing.

For collectors who want maximum visual payoff without constant effort, clerodendrums deliver exactly what the title promises - big color, very little work.

🛒 Start your Clerodendrum collection

📚 Learn more:
💋Clerodendrums in Plant Encyclopedia
💋Do you see Musical Notes in this flower
💋The shrub that smells like a royal bouquet and grows like a weed
💋Bleeding Heart Vine surprised everyone this year!
💋How to get a large, lush and fragrant bush in no time
💋How to add Music to your garden
💋Clerodendrum schmitii and Clerodendrum wallichii
💋What is the difference between Clerodendrum schmitii and Clerodendrum wallichii?
💋What is the most spectacular Clerodendrum
💋How to grow Clerodendrums
💋Fireworks of Winter
💋Fragrant Cashmere Bouquet
💋Fountain Clerodendrum
💋What is better - Blue or Pink
💋Why is it called Blue Butterfly
💋Clerodendrum paniculatum
💋Seaside Clerodendrum
💋Pink Bleeding Heart
💋Why is it called Musical Notes
💋Bleeding Heart Vine
💋Cashmere Bouquet

#Butterfly_Plants #Shade_Garden #How_to #Hedges_with_benefits #Container_Garden

Cashmere (Cashmir) bouquet Plant Facts

Botanical name: Clerodendrum bungei
Also known as: Cashmere (Cashmir) bouquet, Glory Bower, Clerodendron
USDA Zone: 8 - 10
Highligths Large shrub 5-10 ft tallSemi-shadeFull sunWatering: Regular. Let topsoil dry slightlyRed, crimson, vinous flowersPink flowersPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsDeciduous plantFragrant plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
Get personalized tips for your region
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Date: 9 Jan 2026

Mango Tree for Zone 5: top 15 Condo Mango for growing in cold areas

Mango Tree for Zone 5

🥭 Mango Tree for Zone 5: top 15 Condo Mango for growing in cold areas



🥭 Can you grow a mango tree in Zone 5? Short answer - yes! The trick is - containers!
Mango trees are tropical plants but they do great in pots when you choose the right varieties.

🥭 Compact types stay short, respond well to pruning, and produce in containers.
You can grow them on a patio, balcony, even move them indoors in your condo for winter. That is why they are called condo mangoes!
During warm months, they live outside.
When cold weather hits, they come inside.

🥭 With good light, proper watering, fertilizing, and some patience, these trees can reward you with real mangoes. Not a farm harvest, but enough to enjoy and share.

🏆 Most popular Condo Mango varieties:


Baptiste
Carrie
Cogshall
Diamond
Fairchild
Ice Cream
Julie
Keitt
Lancetilla
Lemon Meringue
Mallika
Nam Doc Mai
Okrung
Pickering
Venus

🛒 Discover Condo Mango

📚 Learn more:
What are the Condo Mangos - a practical guide
Top 10 Dwarf "Condo" Mango, great for container culture
Best tropical fruit and edibles to grow in Zone 5 and anywhere outside the Tropics

#Food_Forest #How_to #Discover #Mango

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Date: 10 Feb 2026

These Avocados survived 3 nights of 25F hard freeze, Florida Record Freeze

Cold hardy avocados

⛄️ These Avocados survived 3 nights of 25F hard freeze, Florida Record Freeze



⛄️ Recent winter freezes have once again raised the same urgent question among avocado growers - which varieties actually survive cold weather, and what does survival really look like afterward?

⛄️ After widespread freeze events, trees across many regions showed very different outcomes, from minor leaf burn to complete canopy loss.

⛄️ This video taken on February 4, 2026 at Top Tropicals BFarm in Sebring, FL, reflects what we observed in real conditions after 3 nights of hard freeze.

⛄️ The trees in the video had no protection.

❄️Weather data

Feb 1-6, 2026, Coldest in Recorded History (132 years of observations)
Top Tropicals Farm and Nursery at Sebring FL

🌡 Min temps: 25F, wind chill 14F
⏳ Duration of cold: 3 nights of 8-10 hour hard freeze, along with 7 days of cool daytime temps around 50F
🌀 Wind: 20 mph, with 40-50 mph gusts.

🛒 Explore cold hardy Avocado varieties

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

📚 Learn more:


· Avocado Variety Guide
· 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
· Cold-hardy avocados: how cold-hardy are they?
· Cold-hardy avocado varieties - what freezing they really survive
· Cold-hardy avocado survival groups - what the numbers really mean

#Food_Forest #Avocado #Discover #How_to

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