From our home and garden to yours, we wish you a warm and peaceful
holiday season.
Whether you celebrate Christmas, Hanukkah, as it comes to a close, Kwanzaa,
Feliz Navidad, the New Year, or all of the above, we hope your days are
filled with light and the promise of what is growing ahead.
Gardening connects us across seasons, cultures, and traditions, and we
are grateful to share this journey with you.
Date: 15 Jan 2026
When the Black Bat Lily decides to
bloom
Every so often a plant blooms and the whole greenhouse seems to slow
down.
That is what happened this week with the Black Bat Lily, Tacca
chantrieri. We have grown Taccas for years, but
when the black ones open properly, it still feels special. The flowers are
dark and quiet, almost unreal up close. They do not shout for attention.
They make you lean in.
Right now, we have a lot of them blooming at the same time. If you have
never seen one in person, photos only get you part of the way there. The
wings are darker than you expect, and the whiskers seem to go on forever.
People walk into the greenhouse, stop, stare, and usually ask the same
question:
"Is that real?" - Yes. It is.
A quick honest note, because this matters. The blooms themselves are
delicate and may not travel well. That is just the nature of this plant. The
plants, however, are strong, well established. With the right conditions,
they bloom again. This is not a one-time trick.
Black Tacca is not a beginner houseplant, but it is also not impossible.
It likes filtered
light, steady warmth, and humidity. It does especially well in a greenhouse
or a
bright indoor spot where you already keep plants that enjoy moisture. It is
the kind of plant you keep
close, not one you forget in the corner.
We are offering them now simply because they are ready and looking their
best. If you have been waiting for one,
this is a good moment.
You can see the Black Bat Lily here:
https://toptropicals.com/store/item/2345.htm
Just wanted to share something we are enjoying in the greenhouse right
now. Some plants come and go. Some stay with you.
SAVE 20% OFF Tacca Plants
Use code TACCA2026 at checkout
Limited time offer. Good till 01/23/2026.
Valid on Tacca plants only. Discount applies to plants only, before
shipping and handling.
Not valid with other discounts or coupons. Not valid for past orders.
Tacca (Bat Lily) FAQ
What is Tacca?
Tacca, also known as Bat Lily or Devil Flower, is a tropical plant grown
for its unusual bat-shaped flowers with long whisker-like filaments. The
most popular species
is Tacca chantrieri, the Black Bat Lily.
Is Tacca hard to grow?
Tacca is not a beginner plant, but it is not impossible. It does best
with warmth, humidity, and filtered light. Gardeners who
already grow orchids, calatheas, or other humidity-loving plants usually do
well
with Tacca.
Does Tacca need a greenhouse?
A greenhouse is ideal, but not required. Tacca can be grown indoors in a
bright spot with indirect light and good humidity, such as near a humidifier
or in a bright bathroom with a window or skylight.
Will my Tacca arrive in bloom?
Plants may be blooming in the greenhouse, but flowers are often removed
before shipping because they are
delicate and do not travel well. The plants are well established and capable
of blooming again with proper care.
How often does Tacca bloom?
Tacca does not bloom constantly. It may take time to establish before
flowering, but once settled, it can bloom seasonally and may produce
multiple flowers
in warm, humid conditions.
Does Tacca grow from a bulb?
Tacca grows from a rhizome, not a bulb. The rhizome stores energy and
allows the plant to regrow and bloom again.
Why does Tacca have long whiskers?
The long filaments are thought to help attract pollinators such as flies
by mimicking the look of decaying organic matter. While unusual, this is
part of the plant's natural pollination strategy.
According to our experts: Smokey and Sunshine. When we say experts, we
do not mean consultants or trend writers. We mean two real gardeners.
Smokey watches patterns. Sunshine notices when people rush.
Together, they explain what actually works.
Sunshine: Smokey, thank you for the Christmas present. I am riding
this hobby horse straight into the Year of the Horse! Smokey: I am making the plans for 2026. Planning makes gardening
successful. Sunshine: Coffee and donuts help too, so please include them in your
plan.
Smokey: Hello gardeners. 2026 is the Year of the Horse.
Sunshine: Horses do not garden.
Smokey: Please do not interrupt me. No, they do not. That is just the
calendar. What matters is what gardeners do at the start of every new year.
They often rush and repeat the same mistakes.
Sunshine: The biggest one is rushing the garden before morning
coffee.
Smokey: Correct. Rushing looks like effort, but it is usually just
impatience. Gardens punish impatience very reliably.
Most early-season problems come from doing things too soon:
- watering before roots are active
- fertilizing before growth begins
- planting before conditions settle
- poking plants daily to check how the roots are growing
Sunshine: If you are poking the roots, the plant was fine until you
started poking it.
Smokey: Good gardening is not constant action. It is knowing when to
act and when to stop interfering.
- Plant when the timing is right.
- Let roots work quietly.
- Leave resting plants alone.
Sunshine: Coffee first. Donuts optional, but highly
recommended.
Smokey: One last thing, while you are not rushing.
Our gift cards are still on promotion. They do not need planting, watering,
or timing decisions today.
A gift card is a symbol of patience. Buy it now. Use it when the moment is
right.
Smokey and Sunshine: Our resolution for 2026 is simple: stop
rushing the garden.
Wishing you a calm, steady, coffee-fueled 2026 garden
🐾🌿
Date: 5 Jan 2026
Sunshine: January might feel warm, but its still winter. Wool socks,
scarf, hot coffee. Smokey: You get warm when you work. Plant now so roots are
established before spring growth starts. Sunshine: Alright. Lets see who stays warmer - you digging or me
with coffee.
🌴
Why winter planting works in a warm climate
By our plant expert Tatiana Anderson
We are lucky to live in a warm climate. This is how I think about the
seasons here. Winter is for roots. Spring is for growth. Summer is for
managing heat and water.
So if we want plants that handle summer better, we plant them in the
season that gives them the best start. Winter here is comfortable. The
soil stays workable. The days are mild. And plants are not being stressed by
heat. That is exactly why winter is the best time to plant in Florida and
other warm
areas.
If we use this season well, plants go into spring already settled instead
of trying to catch up. This is what I like to plant now, and why.
🟢 Shrubs next.
Shrubs establish faster than trees, but winter still gives
them an advantage. They settle in quietly before the spring flush and bloom
cycles begin. That usually means steadier growth and fewer problems
once heat returns.
Examples: gardenia,
jasmine, brunfelsia,
hibiscus, clerodendrums.
🟢
Vines are often overlooked. Vines want to grow fast when spring starts.
If the root system is not ready, you get weak growth and frustration.
Planting vines in winter gives them time to build a foundation first, so
spring growth has support.
Examples: Rangoon
creeper,
stephanotis, Petrea, Mexican
Flame Vine.
Ordering plants in winter is often easier than people expect - and for
many plants, it is actually better. Lush foliage plants like philodendrons
and medinilla,
fine-leaved trees such as moringa, jacaranda,
and poinciana,
and even sensitive fruit trees like papaya, jackfruit
or starfruit
ship more safely in cool weather without
overheating stress.
Winter is also ideal for subtropical and cold-tolerant plants, dormant or
deciduous plants like plumeria and adenium, orchids - including ground
orchids and vanilla
orchids, and winter bloomers that flower their best right now. Winter
care is simple: water less, use gentle liquid amino-acid fertilizers like Sunshine
Boosters, and monitor insects.
In mild climates, many tropicals can be planted anytime, while
extra-tender plants can stay potted until spring. Winter is a
perfect time to bring tropical warmth indoors and enjoy greenery when you
need it most.