Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 7 Jul 2016

Growing fruit trees in containers

Will it fruit in a pot? YES! Many tropical fruit trees can be grown in a pot. We get many calls from customers in cooler climates asking if our tropical trees can grow and fruit in a pot. The answer is yes!

Several plants fruit well in pots. Blackberries and raspberries, barbados cherries, blueberries and many more start fruiting even in their 1 gallon containers. We are especially excited about our new Pixie grapes, which are heavily laden with grapes even at only a foot long!

While some plants are small and will fruit easily in a container, others are large trees. For the tree type fruits, we recommend growing only non-seedling plants for pot culture. We have cuttings, air layers and grafted plants that are great options. These have the ability to fruit right away, as they are the same age as the parent tree. Some horticulturists recommend removing the first year fruit to allow the plant to focus on growth and establishing. If the plant is being kept in a pot, this is not necessary.

We also have several dwarf varieties of fruit trees that will thrive in a pot. For avocados, we carry the Wurtz variety which is a dwarf tree... read more...

Date: 12 Apr 2016

Hot novelty plant for hot Arizona

Q: What plants would you recommend for very hot and dry spot in front of my house that gets full sun all day long? I live in AZ, we recently had a couple good rains but this is going to be it for a long time. It gets so hot during the day that every plant I tried didn't make it. We have a few nice orange trees growing well but I would like to plant something compact, colorful and hopefully fragrant if there is such plant.

A: There is a perfect small size plant for you that is extremely fragrant and yet will be thriving in these conditions. It is the famous Jasmine sambac. It will appreciate dry air of Arizona and will bloom profusely for you in full sun or in partial shade. It doesn't mind heat at all.

For colorful accents, a proven winner is Crown of Thorns - Euphorbia millii. New giant size flower varieties were recently selected in Thailand, and we just received a great selection, look at the colors! These plants don't mind hot sunny location at all. The more sun, the better the bloom! Small plants need regular watering until establish, then once they start developing, they will require less water.

Giant Euphorbia flowers from Thailand are 4-5 times bigger than regular flower euphorbia. Diameter of the flower is around 2". Compare giant flower to normal size - picture on the right.

See full list of plants for hot and dry spots.

Date: 26 Mar 2016

Growing Exotic Adeniums

Exotic varieties of Desert Roses. Adeniums have many spectacular hybrids. The basic culture is very similar to orchids. A small pot with excellent drainage is a must. Adeniums do not like both over-watering or drying-out. There is a secret how to create a large swollen caudex: raise the plant a bit every time you re-pot it, so that the upper part of roots will be a little exposed. The plant will form more roots that will go down.

To make your plant develop a large swollen base/trunk, you'll need a good quality fertilizer. Fertilizer requirement for swelling up trunks is also used to increase flowering. It shouldn't be too high in nitrogen, the middle number should be the highest (similar to 10-50-10). Never apply fertilizer directly on roots and do not liquid feed when a plant is thirsty: always water first slightly to avoid root burn and leaf drop. Do not wet leaves. Adeniums need lots of light for heavy flowering.

Most hybrids and species start blooming in the spring when the conditions are warm and days get longer, and continue blooming through the fall and winter in warmer climates. Adeniums like a neutral to hard water. Acidic water tends to sour the soil too fast and may cause root rot. Water plants preferably in the early morning, and allow them to drink up throughout the day. Watering can be done daily to every few days. Never allow your plants to sit in a saucer of water, but don't let them to dry out too often - this causes adeniums to go into early dormancy.

Planting instructions for bare-rooted succulent plants. Position the plant in a pot, size of root system. Use only well-drained soil with high content of Perlite and/or sand (cactus mix can be used), water once and keep in warm (75-80F) place in filtered light. Do not water again until soil dries on surface. Once the plant is established and starts growing new leaves (may take a few weeks), gradually move it into brighter light. Then you can start fertilizing it.

See full list of Adeniums - plants and seeds.

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: 19 Apr 2026

Complete Adenium Care Guide: 9 tips how to keep it simple and thriving

Asdenium plants on the table with adenium soil mix and fertilizer

Asdenium plants on the table with adenium soil mix and fertilizer

🌸 Complete Adenium Care Guide: 9 tips how to keep it simple and thriving



Adeniums don’t need intense care - just the right balance.
Most problems come from too much water, not enough light, or the wrong soil.

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
Get personalized tips for your region


🌸 1. Soil is everything



Why it matters
Adeniums are succulents with thick roots and a caudex that stores water. They must never sit in wet, heavy soil.
Most problems come from soil that stays wet too long - leading to root rot, soft caudex, weak growth, and poor flowering.
Good soil builds strong roots, dries faster, supports a healthy caudex, and improves blooming.

Ideal soil formula
Use a very fast-draining, airy mix with perlite, bark, sand, coconut fiber. Avoid heavy peat-based mixes.
A simple formula: TopTropicals Abundance potting mix + coarse sand (50/50). Use coarse sand (for construction), not fine beach sand. Sand improves drainage, structure, and aeration.
You can also add lava rock and charcoal.

Soil pH
Adeniums prefer slightly alkaline soil. Too much peat (acidic) holds moisture and increases rot risk.
Tip: add a few sea shells on top - watering slowly raises pH.

Golden rule
Better too fast-draining than too heavy.
You can water more. You can’t fix rot.

🌸 2. Containers



Use shallow, unglazed clay pots. They dry faster, improve airflow, and stabilize the plant as the caudex gets heavy.
Do not oversize - keep close to root ball.
When repotting, raise the caudex slightly each time to develop that thick base.

🌸 3. Light



Give as much light as possible.
Full sun is best, but in very hot climates, bright filtered light prevents leaf burn and helps flowers last longer.
Too little light = weak growth and poor blooming.

🌸 4. Watering



Water deeply, then let soil dry out completely before watering again.
Do not keep soil constantly wet. Adeniums prefer the dry side and hate sitting in moisture.
In rainy climates, protect from excess water. Keep under cover - bright light, no constant soaking.

🌸 5. Fertilizer



Feed lightly and regularly during active growth.
Use liquid fertilizer Sunshine Megafloк Bloom Booster on soil and lightly on leaves - avoid the caudex.
Bloom boosters (high phosphorus) support flowers and caudex growth.
Add controlled-release fertilizer (Green Magic) twice a year - spring and late summer. Do not fertilize during winter dormancy.
Add microelements (iron, boron, molybdenum) - Sunshine Superfood supplement - for healthier leaves and longer blooms.

🌸 6. Trimming (pruning)



Trim after flowering, especially leggy branches.
Pruning encourages branching - more branches = more flowers.
Don’t be afraid to cut - it improves structure and blooming.

🌸 7. Caudex development (secret trick)



When repotting, raise the caudex slightly above soil level.
Combined with regular feeding (bloom booster), this helps develop a thicker, more pronounced base.

🌸 8. Seedlings vs grafted plants



Seed-grown plants form a natural caudex but take 2-3 years to bloom and do not come true to type (often simple pink).
Grafted plants combine a developed caudex with a known variety.
Best choice for predictable, high-quality blooms.

🌸 9. Troubleshooting



If something goes wrong, check these first:
· Too much water
· Not enough light
· Soil too heavy
Fix these, and your plant will recover.

🛒 Explore Exotic Thai Adeniums

📚 Learn more:


· Adenium varieties in Plant Encyclopedia
· About #Adenium Rainbow - fantastic varieties
· Adenium rainbow - warm, bright, and full of energy
· Adenium rainbow - pink in every shade
· Dark tones that don’t look real. Secret of a Big Caudex.
· Variegated and impossible to ignore adeniums that change your collection. Soil tips.
· We picked 6 adeniums - you’ll probably want all 6. Soil and Watering tip.
· A few adeniums you don’t want to miss. Trimming tip.
· The adenium colors everyone is talking about right now. Light tips for hot climates.
· Adenium rainbow: these 6 will pull you in. Fertilizing tips.
· How to start your dream collection: before you start
· How to grow a happy Adenium

#Container_Garden #Adeniums #How_to #Discover

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