Happy 4th of July from the tropics! Whether you're staying local or
escaping for the long weekend, it's the perfect time to enjoy your garden, start
something new, or grab that plant you've been eyeing. Red Desert Roses, white fragrant Gardenias and
Jasmines, rare Blue
Ginger - tropical blooms are showing off right now, and we are
celebrating with a hot summer sale: 20% off everything with code HAPPY4TH25,
plus extra savings on combined DEALS and
BOGO! Add some color to your summer and let your garden do the
fireworks!
Use the code below to save 20% on your entire
order:
In the photo above: Bauhinia madagascariensis, Red Butterfly Orchid Tree - dazzles with
bright red flowers striped in gold. A rare, fast-growing tropical that brings
serious color to your garden, it is one of the most striking Orchid trees you
can grow. It thrives in sun and rewards with nonstop color.
Date: 27 Nov 2025
Happy Thanksgiving from all of us at Top
Tropicals!
Smokey: "We made a list of everything we are thankful for this year."
Sunshine: "I helped. Mostly by napping next to it."
Smokey: "And that is exactly why sunshine naps are on the list."
Smokey and Sunshine wanted to share a short Gardener Thanksgiving Message
about what they are thankful for this year:
"We are thankful for warm laps during cold mornings.
Thankful for every gardener who stopped to scratch our heads between loading
carts.
Thankful for the smell of fresh soil, new plants, and boxes that make
perfect cat forts.
Thankful for mango season (even though humans never let us eat the
fruit).
Thankful for sunshine naps on potting tables and shade naps under
benches.
Thankful for all the tiny moments when gardens and people slow down
together.
And thankful that we get to share this tropical adventure with you."
From the whole Top Tropicals Team and PeopleCats, we wish you a warm,
peaceful, plant-filled Thanksgiving 🙏 ♥️
Rainbow plumerias - the wild side of color. Winter dormancy tip 🌈
Some plumerias don’t follow rules - they mix, swirl, and splash colors all over the petals like a tropical sunset in motion. These “rainbow” types are the most playful and unpredictable, with every bloom looking a little different from the next.
Plumeria Plant Facts
Botanical name: Plumeria sp. Also known as: Plumeria, Frangipani
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths
🌸 Today's featured plumerias:
✦ Plumeria Mui Rainbow - deep orange-red center blending into golden yellow and finishing with pink to magenta edges. Bright, fiery colors with a smooth, glowing transition. ✦ Plumeria Pink Jaopraya - a bold swirl of red, white, pink, and yellow all in one flower. Complex, eye-catching, and impossible to ignore. ✦ Plumeria Sunset Symphony - creamy ivory, golden yellow, and coral-pink tones with deeper rose edges, creating a layered sunset effect that shifts from bloom to bloom. ✦ Plumeria Dook - rich pink petals melting into a glowing orange and golden center. Bright, warm, and full of tropical energy that stands out from a distance.
💡 Plumeria tip: winter dormancy
In cooler months, plumerias slow down and may drop all leaves. That’s normal.
During this rest period, cut watering way back and let the plant sleep.
Growth will restart when temperatures rise.
🥭 Coconut Cream - a tropical dessert mango with unreal coconut flavor.
Mango Plant Facts
Botanical name: Mangifera indica Also known as: Mango
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
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🔸Rich, sweet, melt-in-your-mouth texture 🔸Strong coconut-cream flavor with tropical spice 🔸Completely fiberless and silky smooth
🥭 Large, colorful fruit with a glowing orange-red blush and juicy flesh.
This tree grows wild - branches twist in every direction, so give it space and keep it pruned and shaped.
If you want a mango that tastes like dessert, this one is unforgettable. More 👉
Biquinho
pepper loaded with fruit - small, beak-shaped peppers ripen
from green to bright red, offering intense fruity habanero flavor with
little to no heat on a compact, heavy-producing plant.
Sweet Pepper Plant Facts
Botanical name: Capsicum annuum Also known as: Sweet Pepper, Chilli Pepper, Cayenne Pepper, Paprika, Ornamental pepper
USDA Zone: 4 - 10
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A lot of plants that thrive in Florida heat have deep roots in Mexico, and
not just as ornamentals. Think coral vine or flame vine climbing a fence in
summer, or bird of paradise
sitting at the edge of a patio like it owns the place. These are not plants
that need coaxing. They grow fast, full, and unapologetically.
Then there are the plants you actually eat: peppers,
prickly
pear, sweetleaf,
and fruit trees like avocado, guava,
and sapodilla.
They do not just decorate the yard. They change how the yard works, and how
the kitchen feels all year.
Avocado Plant Facts
Botanical name: Persea americana, Persea gratissima Also known as: Avocado, Alligator Pear, Aguacate, Abacate
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
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That is the part that sneaks up on you. Gardening stops being about having a
pretty yard and starts becoming a way of living. Mango tacos taste
different when you picked the mango yourself. Everything does.
Mango Plant Facts
Botanical name: Mangifera indica Also known as: Mango
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
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Kent mango - classic late-season variety with smooth,
fiberless flesh and rich, sweet flavor.
🍀Mexican
Plants That Thrive With Minimal Effort
by Tatiana Anderson, Top Tropicals Garden
Expert
Lippia
dulcis - Aztec Sweet Herb in bloom - a low-growing Mexican herb
with tiny white flowers and remarkably sweet leaves that can be eaten fresh
or added to fruit dishes, traditionally used since Aztec times for coughs
and colds.
Aztec Sweet Herb Plant Facts
Botanical name: Phyla dulcis, Lippia dulcis, Phyla scaberrima, Lippia mexicana Also known as: Aztec Sweet Herb, Sweetleaf
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
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These Mexican plants are surprisingly easy to grow if you give them what
they expect: sun, heat, and good drainage. Most of them are built for tough
conditions and will grow fast with minimal care once established.
The one rule that matters: fill the planting hole with water. If it does
not drain in 5-10 seconds, plant on a mound or use a container.
Flowering
vines will take off quickly, edibles like peppers and sweetleaf
lippia
are very forgiving, and cactus types prefer to be left alone rather than
overwatered.
For full, step-by-step growing tips and plant-specific advice, read our blog
- we break everything down in practical, real-world terms.
Mexican Flame Vine in full bloom - a fast-growing,
drought-tolerant climber that quickly covers fences with vivid red flowers,
attracting
pollinators and adding bold color with minimal care.
Mexican Flame Vine Plant Facts
Botanical name: Pseudogynoxys chenopodioides, Senecio confusus Also known as: Mexican Flame Vine, Orangeglow Vine