Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 17 May 2026

9 awesome accent plants and vines that love heat and dry conditions

9 awesome accent plants and vines that love heat and dry conditions 9 awesome accent plants and vines that love heat and dry conditions 9 awesome accent plants and vines that love heat and dry conditions 9 awesome accent plants and vines that love heat and dry conditions 9 awesome accent plants and vines that love heat and dry conditions

☀️ 9 awesome accent plants and vines that love heat and dry conditions



The hardest spots aren’t for trees - they’re for everything else. The toughest areas are often smaller spaces - along walls, patios, containers, or rocky patches where soil dries out fast. This is where most plants fail quickly.
These picks don’t just survive - they stand out. They bring texture, color, and structure - without needing constant watering or perfect soil.


Why containers are the toughest of all in heat



Growing in pots in hot, dry conditions is a different game. The soil heats up fast, roots can literally overheat, and moisture disappears much quicker than in the ground. If you’re using containers, protect the root zone - group pots together, tuck them into partial shade, or shield the container itself from direct sun. Choosing drought-tolerant plants helps, but don’t assume they can go totally without water - even tough plants in pots can dry out quickly, so check regularly and don’t let them go bone dry.

🔥 9 best smaller plants and vines for hot, dry spots


  1. ☀️ 1. Adenium - Desert Rose 📸
    Stores water in its caudex and thrives in heat - one of the best flowering plants for dry conditions. More details
  2. ☀️ 2. Stapelia gigantea - Starfish Flower 📸
    Unusual and tough - thrives in dry soil and produces massive, eye-catching blooms. More details
  3. ☀️ 3. Cissus quadrangularis - Veld Grape Vine 📸
    A succulent vine that handles heat and drought while adding a unique structural look. More details
  4. ☀️ 4. Jatropha podagrica - Gout Plant 📸
    Thick stems store water, making it surprisingly drought tolerant with a bold tropical look. More details
  5. ☀️ 5. Pedilanthus tithymaloides - Devil's Backbone 📸
    Extremely forgiving - thrives on neglect, heat, and dry soil. More details
  6. ☀️ 6. Agave species - Tequila Agave, Century Plant
    Classic drought plants - architectural, extremely tough, and almost maintenance-free. More details
  7. ☀️ 7. Crocosmia species - Coppertips / Falling Stars
    Handles heat well once established and adds bright seasonal color with minimal care. More details
  8. ☀️ 8. Ipomoea platensis - Caudiciform Morning Glory
    A rare vine with a swollen base - built to handle dry cycles and intense sun. More details
  9. ☀️ 9. Plectranthus hadiensis tomentosus - Camphor Basil
    Soft, aromatic foliage that tolerates dry conditions better than most leafy plants. More details


🛒 Shop drought tolerant plants - for hot and dry spots

📚
Learn more:
Jatropha podagrica - in Plant Encyclopedia
7 tough shrubs that handle heat and dry soil
9 tough trees for hot, dry spots that actually thrive
9 best tropical shrubs that bloom all summer long or year around
The bizarre bloom you cant stop staring at
Coral-blooming bonsai with a bottle-shaped trunk - perfect container plant
Caudiciform Morning Glory
Grows in neglect: tough plant for tough spots

#Discover #Hedges_with_benefits #How_to

Gout Plant Plant Facts

Botanical name: Jatropha podagrica
Also known as: Gout Plant, Gout Stick, Buddha Belly, Guatemala Rhubarb, Tartogo
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Plant with caudexPlant used for bonsaiSmall plant 2-5 ftSemi-shadeShadeFull sunModerate waterYellow, orange flowersRed, crimson, vinous flowersOrnamental foliageToxic or PoisonousPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short timeSeaside, salt tolerant plant
Get personalized tips for your region
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 18 May 2026

Want Massive Mulberry Harvests? Do These 5 Things Before May Ends

Want Massive Mulberry Harvests? Do These 5 Things Before May Ends Want Massive Mulberry Harvests? Do These 5 Things Before May Ends

🍇 Want Massive Mulberry Harvests? Do These 5 Things Before May Ends



Don’t let your mulberry tree fool you. While they are incredibly low-maintenance, what you do in May dictates your summer harvest. Avoid these common mistakes for a bumper crop of juicy berries.

Mulberry trees are famously bulletproof, handling intense heat and pumping out massive crops with little care. But May is the month that decides it all. Right now, they are pouring energy into fruit development. A few simple mistakes this month can quietly sabotage your harvest.

Fortunately, maximizing your crop is easy if you follow these five simple rules:
  1. 1. The Deep Soak Rule
    While established mulberries tolerate drought, moisture stress causes them to drop young berries early. Drop the sprinkler—frequent, shallow watering only wets the surface. Instead, give the tree a slow, deep soak that penetrates the root zone. Check the soil two inches down; if it’s dry, water thoroughly.
  2. 2. Lock it in with Mulch
    Late spring heat evaporates soil moisture fast. Apply a 2-to-4-inch layer of pine bark or compost to keep roots cool and suppress weeds. Crucial rule: Leave a 4-inch gap around the base of the trunk. Piling mulch against the bark traps moisture and invites devastating fungal rot.
  3. 3. Don't Over-Fertilize
    Mulberries are naturally vigorous. If you feed them this month, use a balanced, slow-release organic plant food. Avoid high-nitrogen fertilizers. Excess nitrogen triggers a massive explosion of green leaves, causing the tree to completely forget to grow fruit.
  4. 4. Put the Pruning Shears Away
    Heavy spring pruning clips off active fruiting wood and decimates your harvest. Mulberries are also notorious "bleeders" - cutting now causes them to lose significant sap, stressing the tree during fruit set. Only remove dead or damaged wood. Save major shaping for winter dormancy.
  5. 5. Exploit the Softwood Cuttings Window
    Want more trees? May is prime time for softwood cuttings. Cut a few 6-inch flexible green stems, strip the lower leaves, dip in rooting hormone, and tuck into moist potting mix in partial shade. They root incredibly fast!

    🛒
    Choose from Mulberry varieties


📚 Learn more:


Mulberry (Morus hybrids) in Plant Encyclopedia
Mulberry yogurt swirl: Quick-n-Fun exotic recipes
Why gardeners say this is the best Mulberry ever
What are the best Mulberry varieties

#Food_Forest #Discover #How_to

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 15 May 2026

Smokey and Sunshine HIRING NOW: Customer service / sales in garden center

👨‍� Smokey and Sunshine HIRING NOW: Customer service / sales in garden center

Sunshine: Smokey, we need plant people.
Smokey: Does your girlfriend know plants?
Sunshine: Of course. She fertilized my donuts so they would grow larger.
Smokey: Did it work?
Sunshine: Kind of. I gained three pounds.


TopTropicals.com is looking for a part-time customer service and sales team member for our Ft Myers Garden Center.

If you genuinely love plants, enjoy helping people, and don't mind getting your hands dirty in a tropical nursery environment – then working with rare tropical plants, fruit trees, and fellow plant lovers can be fun and rewarding!

💼 Responsibilities



· Help walk-in customers select plants and check out
· Answer customer questions by phone, email, social media, and message board
· Open and close office, operate cash register
· General customer service and sales support

📚 Requirements



· Genuine love for plants and willingness to learn. We will train
· Friendly, patient, and polite with customers
· Strong work ethic and reliability; punctuality is essential
· Ability to follow instructions and work efficiently
· Must be able to lift up to 50 lbs and comfortable working outdoors in Florida heat and weather
· Drug-free - background check and drug test upon employment
· Valid Florida driver's license and reliable transportation
· Must love cats - our famous "PeopleCats" helpers patrol the gardens daily

‍� Preferred qualifications



· Basic computer skills (email, office, internet). We will train
· Previous plant knowledge or nursery experience
· Sales or customer service experience

💰 Pay



· Starting pay: $18/hour depending on experience and performance
· Opportunity for growth based on performance

📅 Schedule



· Part-time to start, potential for full-time later
· Friday and Saturday, 9 am - 4 pm

📍 Location:



Top Tropicals Garden Center
13890 Orange River Blvd
Ft Myers, FL 33905

✍️ How to apply:



Please email a brief resume and a short paragraph explaining why you'd like this job.

Resume guidelines:
· Keep it brief; include job history and education
· Please avoid long descriptions of unrelated experience
· Tell us why working with plants and people interests you

🚶‍➡️ To apply in person:



You are welcome to visit our Garden Center during business hours:
Monday-Saturday, 9 am - 4 pm
To apply in person, ask for Kristi - our manager.
No phone calls please.

Thanks for applying - we hope to see you working alongside our plants, #PeopleCats, and fellow plant lovers soon.


🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 11 May 2026

7 tough shrubs that handle heat and dry soil

7 tough shrubs that handle heat and dry soil 7 tough shrubs that handle heat and dry soil 7 tough shrubs that handle heat and dry soil 7 tough shrubs that handle heat and dry soil

☀️ 7 tough shrubs that handle heat and dry soil



Tired of shrubs that burn out in summer? A lot of shrubs look great in spring - then collapse when real heat hits. Leaves scorch, blooms stop, and watering becomes a full-time job. That’s where the right plant choice changes everything.
These shrubs are built for extremes. They handle blazing sun, reflected heat, and dry soil without constant attention. Some even perform better when conditions get tough.


🔥 7 best shrubs for hot, dry spots


  1. ☀️ 1. Giant Milkweed (Arka) - Calotropis gigantea 📸
    Silvery leaves reflect heat, and it thrives in dry, poor soils where most plants fail. One of the most powerful butterfly plants! More details
  2. ☀️ 2. American Beautyberry - Callicarpa americana 📸
    A Florida native that handles heat well - drought tolerant once established and known for its bright purple berries. More details
  3. ☀️ 3. Plumbago 📸
    One of the easiest flowering shrubs - thrives in full sun and keeps blooming with pretty sky-blue flowers through heat with minimal water. More details
  4. ☀️ 4. Cocoplum - Chrysobalanus icaco
    Excellent for coastal and dry conditions - tough, evergreen, and great as a hedge. Plus tasty fruit bonus! More details
  5. ☀️ 5. Dwarf Bottlebrush - Callistemon Little John
    A compact, dense version of the classic bottlebrush that stays small but performs big in heat. It handles full sun, poor soil, and dry conditions once established, while still producing those bright red brush-like flowers that pollinators love. Perfect for tight spaces where you need something tough, tidy, and reliable. More details
  6. ☀️ 6. Calliandra tweedii With Love - Red Tassel Flower 📸
    Fast-growing, very cold-tolerant, and handles dry spells surprisingly well once established. Beautiful scarlet red flowers throughout the year. More details
  7. ☀️ 7. Dwarf Powderpuff - Calliandra emarginata
    Compact, resilient, and a great choice for smaller spaces that still need something tough. More details


👉 Think trees and vigorous shrubs are your only option? Stay with us - next up are smaller plants and vines that thrive where everything else dries out.

🛒 Shop drought tolerant plants - for hot and dry spots

📚
Learn more:
Calotropis gigantea - Giant Milkweed - in Plant Encyclopedia
9 tough trees for hot, dry spots that actually thrive
9 best tropical shrubs that bloom all summer long or year around

#Discover #Hedges_with_benefits #How_to

Giant Milkweed Plant Facts

Botanical name: Calotropis gigantea
Also known as: Giant Milkweed, Crown Flower, Giant Calotrope, Arka, Jilledu, Erukkam Madar, White Madaar
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Large shrub 5-10 ft tallFull sunModerate waterBlue, lavender, purple flowersWhite, off-white flowersPink flowersPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsEthnomedical 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.Seaside, salt tolerant plant
Get personalized tips for your region
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 10 May 2026

🍑 Tree-Ripened Peaches Change Everything

Smokey  and  Sunshine  relax  under  a  peach  tree  in  the  S&S  Garden, 
 discussing  low-chill  peaches  for  Florida  while  enjoying  peach  cobbler  with 
 ice 
 cream.
Sunshine: I love peach cobbler. Smokey, why are peaches on the tree so early?
Smokey: Low-chill peach varieties for Florida. They ripen much sooner.
Sunshine: I thought peaches were for Georgia.
Smokey: Not if you plant low-chill peaches. And speaking of peaches, do you know about donut peaches?
Sunshine: Donut peaches? Finally, horticulture I can understand.

Some fruits carry memories before you've even tasted them.

There's something about a peach still warm from the tree - the way it gives a little when you pick it, the smell that hits you before you even take a bite. It makes you slow down. It makes summer feel like it actually meant to show up.

For Florida gardeners, that moment used to feel borrowed. Peaches were a Georgia thing, a Carolina thing. You'd admire someone else's harvest and quietly file it under not for us.

Low-chill peaches rewrote that story.

Here's the thing about regular peaches - they need cold. Not just a cool night or two, but a real winter. We're talking 600 to 1,000 hours below 45F. That's how they know to wake up in spring and actually fruit. South Florida just doesn't deliver that. The trees will grow fine, look healthy even, and then give you almost nothing come harvest time. Frustrating doesn't cover it.

Low-chill varieties are different. They were bred specifically for places like ours - warm winters, mild springs. Some only need 100 hours of chill. A hundred. That's a few cold fronts, not a season. And because they're working with our climate instead of against it, they fruit reliably. Every year.

They're not just a Florida trick either. Gardeners in coastal Texas, southern Louisiana, southern California - anywhere in that Zone 8b to 10 range - have been growing these successfully. If you've got warm winters and thought peaches weren't for you, they probably just weren't the right peaches.

🛒 Shop Low-Chill Peach trees

Several  ripe  flat  peaches,  also  known  as  donut  peaches  or  Saturn 
 peaches,  displayed  on  a  white  plate.  Two  peaches  are  cut  open,  showing  the 
 pale  white  flesh  and  small  central  pit  with  pink-red  coloring  around  the 
 seed 
 area.

Flat peaches - sometimes called DONUT peaches - are known for their sweet white flesh, low acidity, and fun squashed shape.