Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 2 Mar 2026

😼😺 The Story Behind Smokey and Sunshine 🐾

Smokey  and  Sunshine  in  office  presentation  about  Cherry  of  the  Rio 
 Grande  freeze  survival,  with  Sunshine  pointing  at  polar  bear  and  penguin 
 marketing  poster,  coffee  and  donuts  on  table,  tropical  plants  on  shelves  in 
 background.
Sunshine: You know, February 27 was International Polar Bear Day. I just learned about it and got a brilliant marketing idea. Cherry of the Rio Grande survived 25F. With wind. Real wind. That means we go north. Let them taste this magic. I even have a donut recipe with the fruit. It’s a bomb, Smokey. We expand. Trust me. Finally you can afford that new watering timer.

Smokey: Not so fast, genius. Twenty five degrees is not the North Pole. And polar bears and penguins do not share zip codes.

Sunshine: You always pour cold water on my brilliance. Fine. Where do we start?

Smokey: Well, first you go talk to Tatiana. She graduated from the Geography Department. She can explain climate zones. Cherry of the Rio Grande can grow in North Florida, Texas, and similar climates. Let’s master that before we conquer Arctic.

Sunshine: So… Phase One: Geography?

Smokey: Exactly.

Some stories are easier to tell with a little humor. Smokey and Sunshine were never just mascots. They represent the two forces behind every decision we make here: bold ideas and careful reality. One dreams big. The other checks the climate zone map. Together, they remind us that growing plants is part science, part optimism, and always personal. If you have ever wondered why they keep appearing in our newsletters, you can read their full story on the Smokey and Sunshine page. They have been with us longer than most people realize.

🐾 Learn the Story of Smoky and Sunshine

Freeze Testing of Grumichama and Cherry of Rio Grande 🍒❄️

Grumichama  tree  (Eugenia  brasiliensis)  showing  white  flowers  and  ripe 
 red  fruits  in  tropical  garden 
 conditions

Eugenia brasiliensis - Grumichama tree flowering and fruiting

When temperatures dropped to 25F, with wind chill near 14F, winter made it clear which tropical trees were truly resilient. Some plants burned back. Tender growth collapsed. But our established Eugenia cherries stood steady. Leaves held. Branches stayed flexible. The canopy remained intact.

Cherry of the Rio Grande (Eugenia aggregata) and Grumichama (Eugenia brasiliensis) are among the most cold-hardy tropical cherries for Southern gardens. Both are native to Brazil and thrive in USDA Zones 9b–11, and even protected 9a sites.

Cherry of the Rio Grande Plant Facts

Botanical name: Eugenia involucrata, Eugenia aggregata
Also known as: Cherry of the Rio Grande, Cere Jodo Rio Grande
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Small tree 10-20 ftSemi-shadeFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryWatering: Regular. Let topsoil dry slightlyEdible plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
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Grumichama Plant Facts

Botanical name: Eugenia brasiliensis, Eugenia dombeyi
Also known as: Grumichama, Brazilian Cherry
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Small tree 10-20 ftSemi-shadeFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryEdible plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short timeSeaside, salt tolerant plant
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Cherry of the Rio Grande produces dark ruby fruit that ripens almost black, with a rich, full cherry flavor. It flowers early in spring and can fruit well into summer. Mature trees can tolerate brief drops into the low 20s once established. Trees typically grow 8 to 15 feet tall, remain naturally compact, and often begin fruiting within 2 to 3 years.

Grumichama is an evergreen tree known for both beauty and productivity. In spring, it covers itself in white starburst flowers that attract pollinators. Within about four weeks, glossy purple-black fruit develops. Established trees tolerate temperatures into the upper 20s and grow well in the ground or in 5–10 gallon containers. Mature trees can produce hundreds of fruits per season.

Across the Eugenia group, strengths are consistent: early bearing, compact growth, heat tolerance, light freeze endurance, and low pest pressure. They are adaptable to different soils, need modest water once established, and perform in full sun or partial shade. Birds enjoy the fruit, but there is usually plenty to share.

Nutritionally, Eugenia cherries provide Vitamin C, fiber, antioxidants, and notable Vitamin A that supports eye health. They offer sweetness with real dietary value.

In the kitchen, they are simple and rewarding. Cherry of the Rio Grande makes an easy compote. Simmer the fruit with a small amount of water until soft, mash lightly, and spoon over pancakes or warm bread. Grumichama turns into a deep red jam with sugar and lime, or can be blended into a bright spoon drizzle over vanilla ice cream.

Even when not fruiting, both trees remain attractive year-round with glossy evergreen foliage and clean structure. They fit well into edible landscapes, small yards, and container gardens.

Winter will return. The difference lies in planting fruit trees that can handle heat, humidity, and the occasional cold snap. If you are building a food forest for lasting harvests, cold-hardy tropical cherries like Cherry of the Rio Grande and Grumichama deserve a place in your garden.

Ripe  Grumichama  fruits  (Eugenia  brasiliensis)  hanging  on  a  branch  with 
 glossy 
 leaves

Ripe Grumichama (Eugenia brasiliensis) fruits developing on the tree, turning deep red to nearly black when fully mature.

Cherry  of  the  Rio  Grande  (Eugenia  aggregata  cv.  Calycina)  fruits 
 ripening  from  green  to  dark  purple  on  the 
 branch

Eugenia aggregata (cv. Calycina), Cherry of the Rio Grande

🛒 Plant hardy Eugenia cherries

Date: 23 Feb 2026

❄️ The Hardiness Report: February 2026 ❄️

🐾 Smokey & Sunshine’s real-world survival data from our Sebring, Florida Research Gardens. Smokey analyzed the data. Sunshine just stayed happy. Here is what they found.

Macadamia  tree  surviving  25F  freeze  as  Smokey  inspects  leaves  and 
 Sunshine  holds  steaming  coffee  in  frosty  garden.
Sunshine: Twenty five degrees. Wind chill fourteen. And it is still standing... like nothing happened?
Smokey: This is macadamia strength.
Sunshine: I should put a macadamia nut in my coffee and borrow some of that strength.
Smokey: Do not get too nutty yet. It still needs curing and cracking.

📊 Weather Data – February 1–6, 2026

Sebring, Florida – 132 years of recorded observations
This was not a light frost. It was a prolonged, windy, penetrating hard freeze.

  • 🌡 Minimum temperature: 25F
  • ❄️ Wind chill: 14F
  • ⏳ Duration: 3 nights of 8–10 hour hard freeze
  • ☀️ Daytime temperatures: around 50F for 7 days
  • 🌀 Wind: sustained 20 mph, gusts 40–50 mph

While all our plants in pots were protected in greenhouses, our in-ground plantings faced the freeze outdoors. We covered what we could. Even so, some plants were damaged, some died, and some surprised us by surviving.

In the next few newsletters, we will share the real survivors - the plants that proved themselves in the ground, under real conditions. Smokey and Sunshine have been out in the fields assessing the damage from the February 1–6 freeze. While many plants struggled, the Macadamia proved to be a true standout. This is how we grow them to handle the tough years.

Why does this matter? Because we have gotten used to warm winters, and this freeze was a rude awakening. Not everyone lives in Miami. If you garden in places where a real cold event can happen, you have to be prepared - and you have to plant what can take it.

🌰 Macadamia: Freeze Tested and Standing

Three  year  old  macadamia  tree  after  three  nights  of  25F  hard  freeze  in 
 February  2026,  showing  healthy  foliage.

3 year old macadamia tree after 3 nights of hard freeze in February 2026 - standing strong.

When temperatures dropped to 25F with wind chill near 14F, our established macadamia trees remained upright, green, and structurally intact. Leaves held. Branches stayed firm. No collapse, no panic.

That is not luck. That is macadamia hardiness.

Often considered a "tropical luxury nut," macadamia proved it can handle more than many gardeners expect. In USDA Zones 9b-11, with proper drainage and site selection, it is not just ornamental - it is a long-term food tree with real resilience.

In a winter that reminded us not to take warmth for granted, macadamia earned its place on the survivor list.

The nut itself is famous for its strength. The shell is among the hardest in the nut world, requiring serious pressure to crack. Inside, the kernel is creamy, buttery, rich, and deeply satisfying. High in monounsaturated fats and naturally low in sugar, macadamias have long been valued both for flavor and for nutrition.

The tree is equally impressive. An evergreen with tough leaves and elegant spring flowers, it matures into a productive, manageable canopy. Nuts develop slowly over six to seven months. Production begins in a few years and increases steadily as the tree matures. Plant it once, and it can reward you for decades.

Macadamia  tree  with  pink  flower  racemes  and  developing  round  green  nuts
   on  branches.

Macadamia flowers and developing nuts on the tree.

Cold will come again. It always does. The question is not whether winter will test your garden. The question is whether your trees are ready. Macadamia proved it is. If you are building a garden that feeds you for decades, this is a tree worth planting.

🛒 Add Macadamia Tree to your garden

Fresh  macadamia  nuts  with  outer  husks  removed  and  hard  brown  shells 
 exposed  in  a  container.

Freshly harvested macadamia nuts with husk removed and hard shells visible.

Date: 13 Feb 2026

Last-minute Valentine idea: let them choose!

Valentines Day Gift Card

Valentines Day Gift Card

👩‍❤️‍💋‍ Last-minute Valentine idea: let them choose!



If timing, weather, or plant selection feels uncertain, a Gift Card keeps things easy. Your Valentine can choose the perfect plant when the time is right - especially helpful for gardeners up north or when you want the gift to unfold later.

👩‍❤️‍💋‍ Valentine’s Day Gift Card Bonus



To make Valentine’s Day a little sweeter, we are adding 15% extra value to every gift card for a limited time.
Just include a Valentine greeting in the gift card message field.

💵 For example, a $100 gift card becomes $115 to spend.



Offer valid through 02/15/2026. 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
🛒
Explore gift plants

📚 Learn more:


Valentines day Best Gift Plant Ideas
Eight favorite plants of romance, affection, and emotional connection
Four popular plants of friendship, appreciation, and shared connection
Top nine plants of love, desire, and the senses: aphrodisiacs and sensory connections

#Shade_Garden #Container_Garden

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 27 Jan 2026

🌸 Why adenium?

  • Easy to grow in containers
  • Thrive in sun or shade, indoors or out
  • Tolerant of low humidity
  • Very low water needs
  • Forgiving plants that tolerate missed watering
  • Long-lived plants that improve with age
  • Compact size, ideal for patios, balconies, and windows
  • Form unique, sculptural caudex shapes
  • Decorative even when not in bloom
  • Produce stunning, long-lasting flowers
  • Often blooming in a few months

🌸 Adenium Care Basics

Adeniums have many spectacular hybrids, and their basic culture is closer to orchids than to typical houseplants. The key is a small pot, excellent drainage, bright light, and careful watering.

Adenium Plant Facts

Botanical name: Adenium sp.
Also known as: Adenium, Desert Rose, Impala Lily
USDA Zone: 9 - 10
Highligths Plant with caudexLarge shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunWater Requirement: Low. Allow soil to dry out between wateringsWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryYellow, orange flowersRed, crimson, vinous flowersUnusual colorBlue, lavender, purple flowersWhite, off-white flowersPink flowersToxic or Poisonous
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Pot and Soil

  • Use a small pot sized to the root system.
  • Excellent drainage is required.
  • Use a very well-drained mix. We recommend specially formulated for Adeniums Desert Rose Soilless Mix

Light and Blooming

  • Give lots of light for heavy flowering.
  • In warm conditions and longer days, most hybrids and species begin blooming in spring.
  • In warmer climates they can keep blooming through fall and winter.

Watering (Most Important)

  • Adeniums dislike both extremes: over-watering and drying out too often.
  • Use neutral to hard water when possible.
  • Acidic water can sour the mix quickly and may cause root rot.
  • Water in the early morning so the plant can drink through the day.
  • Watering frequency can range from daily to every few days, depending on heat, light, and how fast the mix dries.
  • Never let the pot sit in a saucer of water.
  • Do not let the plant dry out too often, or it may go into early dormancy.
  • Do not wet the leaves.

Fertilizer (Caudex + Flowers)

  • To build a large swollen base/trunk (caudex), use a good quality fertilizer.
  • A fertilizer that helps trunk swelling also supports flowering. The best choice for this is Sunshine Megaflor.
  • Avoid fertilizers that are too high in nitrogen; choose a formula where the middle number is the highest.
  • Never apply fertilizer directly on roots.
  • Do not liquid feed a thirsty plant.
  • Always water lightly first, then feed, to avoid root burn and leaf drop.

The Caudex "Secret" (Shaping the Base)

  • At each repotting, lift the plant slightly so the upper roots are a little exposed.
  • This encourages new roots to grow downward and helps create a thicker, more interesting caudex shape.

Multi-Grafted Plants (Important Note)

  • Adenium hybrids can be multi-grafted with several colors/varieties on the same plant.
  • The swollen base forms only when the rootstock plant is grown from seed.

✍️ Adenium FAQ

How much light do Adeniums need?

Adeniums need lots of light for heavy flowering. Most hybrids and species start blooming when conditions are warm and days get longer, and in warmer climates they can keep blooming through fall and winter.

What is the best pot size for Adeniums?

Use a small pot sized to the root system, with excellent drainage. A small pot with excellent drainage is a must.

What kind of soil mix should I use?

Use only a well-drained mix. Adeniums do best in very well-drained soil. A small pot plus excellent drainage is the foundation of success.

How often should I water Adeniums?

Adeniums do not like both over-watering and drying-out too often. Water preferably in the early morning and do not water again until the mix dries on the surface. Watering can range from daily to every few days depending on heat, light, and how fast the mix dries.

Can Adeniums sit in a saucer of water?

No. Never allow your Adenium to sit in a saucer of water.

Should I wet the leaves when watering?

No. Do not wet the leaves.

What kind of water do Adeniums prefer?

Adeniums prefer neutral to hard water. Acidic water tends to sour the soil too fast and may cause root rot.

How do I create a large, swollen caudex?

At each repotting, lift the plant slightly so the upper parts of the roots are a little exposed. This encourages the plant to form more roots that grow downward and helps create a thicker, more interesting caudex.

What fertilizer should I use for caudex growth and blooms?

Use a good quality fertilizer to support both trunk swelling and flowering. Avoid formulas that are too high in nitrogen; the middle number should be the highest. Never apply fertilizer directly on roots, and do not liquid feed when the plant is thirsty. Water lightly first, then feed, to avoid root burn and leaf drop.

Can an Adenium have multiple flower colors on one plant?

Yes. Adenium hybrids can be multi-grafted with several colors or varieties on the same plant. Note that the swollen base forms only when the rootstock plant is grown from seed.

✍️ Learn About Adeniums

🎥 Watch Adenium Videos

🛒 Shop Adeniums

Date: 21 May 2026

Rare Pineapple that looks like a sunset and thrives on neglect

Rare Pineapple that looks like a sunset and thrives on neglect Rare Pineapple that looks like a sunset and thrives on neglect Rare Pineapple that looks like a sunset and thrives on neglect

🌅 Rare Pineapple that looks like a sunset and thrives on neglect



Forget plain green plants - this pineapple looks like a tropical sunset! One look at Pineapple Lava Burst and you immediately understand why people stop and stare. This isn't your typical pineapple plant hiding quietly in the background; the leaves explode with shades of burgundy, pink, cream, green, and bronze, often changing intensity depending on sunlight and temperature. Even gardeners who don't normally collect bromeliads suddenly want one after seeing it in person.

🍍 A pineapple plant that acts like living artwork



Pineapple Lava Burst belongs to the same plant family as bromeliads, and it definitely inherited the dramatic side of the family. The long arching leaves create a fountain-like shape, while the bold variegation gives the plant a painted appearance. In bright light, the burgundy and pink tones become especially intense, making the whole plant glow with tropical color.

Unlike many ornamental plants that only shine during bloom season, Lava Burst stays visually interesting year-round. Even without fruit, it looks like a centerpiece.

🍍 Yes - it actually produces a pineapple



One of the fun surprises about Lava Burst is that it does produce a real edible pineapple. The fruit is usually smaller than grocery store pineapples, but that’s not really the point. When the colorful fruit forms in the center, the plant becomes a tropical sculpture - a combination of striped foliage and bright fruit that looks like it belongs in a botanical garden rather than a typical backyard.

🍍 Pro-Grower Tips for Success


  • 👌 Color Intensity: To get the most "lava" out of your plant, give it plenty of light. Increased UV exposure is the physiological trigger for anthocyanin production - the pigment responsible for those deep red and pink tones. If your plant is looking a bit green, it’s likely asking for a sunnier spot.
  • 👌 Cold Hardiness & Protection: While these thrive in the heat, they are sensitive to frost. After the recent 25°F freezes we’ve seen in Florida, remember that these are the perfect "mobile" plants. Because they handle containers so well, you can easily move them into a garage or indoors during a cold snap to protect the foliage from burn.
  • 👌 Fertilizing for Vibrancy: To keep the variegation crisp and the colors saturated, use a high-quality micro-element fertilizer - SUNSHINE Ananas - Pineapple and Bromeliad Booster with every watering. During active growth season, a gentle application of Green Magic provides the necessary nutrients to maintain plant health and color intensity without the risk of burning the delicate root system.


🍍 Surprisingly easy for a tropical-looking plant



Despite looking rare and complicated, ornamental pineapples are generally very manageable. Lava Burst likes warmth, bright light, and fast-draining soil. It handles containers extremely well, which makes it popular for patios, pool areas, lanais, and sunny windows indoors. Like many pineapple varieties, it dislikes soggy soil more than occasional dryness, making it much easier to grow than many fussy tropical foliage plants.

Its architectural shape also pairs beautifully with palms, crotons, cordylines, and other colorful tropical mainstays. Whether you have a sprawling poolside landscape or a small-space apartment garden, this plant brings a wow factor that is hard to beat.

🛒 Ready to add a burst of lava to your plant collection?
Check availability for Pineapple Lava Burst beyond traditional Pineapples

📚 Learn more:


Variegated Pineapple Lava Burst Rainbow in Plant Encyclopedia
What is the best pineapple to grow at home
What are the best varieties of Pineapples?
How we ate all pineapples from that ugly corner
The most luscious Hospitality Fruit: Pineapple
Three must-have fruit for every tropical garden

#Food_Forest #Container_Garden #Discover #Nature_Wonders

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