Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 31 May 2026

🔮 The Search for Enchanted Incense

Smokey  and  Sunshine  investigate  the  mystery  of  Enchanted  Incense,  a 
 fragrant  Cerbera  hybrid  from  Thailand,  using  photos,  maps,  and  botanical 
 clues.
Sunshine: John said it smelled like a thousand jasmines.
Smokey: And somehow that's all the information he brought back from Thailand.
Sunshine: He brought a photo, too.
Smokey: Excellent. We can begin our international manhunt.

Well, Smokey and Sunshine have closed the case and found the mystery plant. The cork board is coming down, the magnifying glass is back in the drawer, and the "Enchanted Incense" mug is finally empty. Now let's talk about the plant itself.

🌸 Some plants arrive with a label. Some arrive with a story.

Close-up  of  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted  Incense  flowers  showing  rich 
 reddish-brown  petals  with  soft  white  edges  and  bright  pink  flower  tubes.  The
    unusual  blooms  are  displayed  against  dark  foliage,  highlighting  their 
 exotic  shape  and  velvety  texture.

Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense - produces some of the most unusual fragrant flowers in the tropical garden. Its velvety reddish blooms, outlined in white and carried on vivid pink tubes, create an exotic display that looks hand-painted.

When our good friend John Mood returned from a plant conference in Thailand, he did not bring us a plant. He brought us a mystery.

John had spent decades growing and collecting rare tropical plants. When he said he had found something special, we paid attention.

On a visit to Chatuchak Market, one of the most famous plant markets in Asia, something stopped him. Not the flowers. The fragrance.

"I found a plant that smells stronger than a thousand jasmines," John told us.

That one sentence stayed with us for years.

He had photographs. He had his memory of that scent. What he did not have was a name. No tag. No seller information. Just the photos and the certainty that he had smelled something genuinely unusual.

So we started looking.

We showed the photographs around. We asked collectors. We compared flowers. Every lead turned into another question. But eventually, after years of searching on and off, we found it.

The mystery plant turned out to be an unusual Cerbera unlike anything we had grown before. Today we call it Enchanted Incense. Fragrance lovers recognized immediately what John had recognized in that Bangkok market. This was not just another pretty tropical flower.

🌸 The Plant

Full  view  of  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted  Incense  growing  in  a  nursery 
 container,  displaying  dramatic  dark  burgundy  foliage  with  wavy-edged  leaves 
 and  clusters  of  unusual  reddish-pink  flowers.  New  growth  emerges  in  rich 
 bronze  tones,  creating  a  striking  tropical  appearance.

Even when not in full bloom, Cerbera x manghas Enchanted Incense is a standout plant. Its glossy, deep burgundy foliage and bronze new growth create a bold tropical presence, while the unusual flowers add an extra layer of intrigue.

Visitors at our nursery still walk past it and stop. Not because they noticed the plant. Because they noticed something in the air and could not figure out where it was coming from.

The flowers start soft pink and white, then deepen to rich red and auve as they mature. They come in clusters, four to five inches across, and the fragrance they produce does not stay close to the flower. It moves. It fills the space around the plant. On a warm morning it can perfume an entire patio.

The foliage is worth mentioning too. Deep green leaves with burgundy and mauve tones that make it attractive even when it is not blooming. The growth habit is slow and slightly weeping, similar to plumeria, which is no coincidence since they are close relatives. Unlike plumeria, Enchanted Incense stays evergreen in warm climates.

It is a compact, slow-growing small tree that is happy in a container. That makes it practical for gardeners in colder climates who need to bring it in for winter, and for anyone who wants a fragrant plant near a seating area rather than somewhere across the yard.

🌸 Why We Grow It

Close-up  of  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted  Incense  flowers  nestled  among 
 dark  burgundy  foliage.  The  unusual  blooms  feature  velvety  reddish-brown 
 petals  edged  in  white,  emerging  from  vivid  pink  flower  tubes  and  surrounded 
 by  pale  star-shaped  calyces.

The flowers of Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense - look otherworldly. Deep reddish petals, bright pink tubes, and contrasting white edges combine to create one of the most distinctive fragrant blooms.

We grow thousands of plants, and most can be described in a sentence or two.

This one cannot.

A large Enchanted Incense grows right outside our office. Every year it reminds us why we spent so much time searching for it.

Visitors stop beside it and ask the same question: "What is that smell?"

They usually notice the fragrance before they notice the plant.

Some follow the scent across the nursery. Others stop in the middle of a conversation and start looking around. Nearly everyone ends up standing next to the tree trying to figure out where that incredible fragrance is coming from.

In a world full of beautiful tropical plants, Enchanted Incense remains one of the few that announces itself before you even see it.

That is why we love growing it.

Feature Description
Common Name Enchanted Incense
Botanical Name Cerbera x manghas
Origin Thailand
Flowers White to soft pink, deepening to red and pink
Fragrance Exceptional, far-reaching
Container Friendly Yes
Cold Tolerance USDA Zones 9-11 (Low 30s°F with caution)
Growth Habit Slow, compact, slightly weeping

🛒 Add Enchanted Incense to your collection

Growing Tips

Close-up  of  a  pink-flowering  form  of  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted 
 Incense,  featuring  velvety  rose-pink  petals  with  crisp  white  edges.  The 
 flower  is  surrounded  by  burgundy  foliage,  red  flower  buds,  and  pale  pink 
 star-shaped 
 calyces.

Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense can display remarkable variation in flower color. This form combines soft rose-pink blooms with white-edged petals and rich burgundy foliage, creating a striking contrast throughout the plant.
  • Light: Full sun is best (at least six hours daily). It will tolerate partial shade but blooms much more generously in good light.
  • Watering: Water regularly during warm weather. In cool weather and winter, keep the soil on the drier side. Overwatering when temperatures are low is the most common mistake.
  • Soil: Use a well-draining mix. This plant absolutely does not want wet feet.
  • Fertilizer: Feed with a Green Magic controlled-release fertilizer for flowering plants in spring, supplemented with occasional liquid fertilizer through the summer. For non-stop blooms without the risk of salt build-up in containers, we highly recommend Sunshine Boosters™. Read our Guide to Sunshine Boosters™ and Green Magic fertilizer
  • Winter Care: Bring it indoors when temperatures approach the mid-30s°F. The rootstock is fairly tough, but the foliage is not. Cold and wet conditions combined are the real risk.

One Last Thing

Macro  close-up  of  a  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted  Incense  flower  resting 
 against  a  person's  fingers  for  scale.  The  bloom  features 
 velvety  reddish-brown  petals  with  narrow  white  margins  and  a  fuzzy  bright 
 pink 
 center,  revealing  the  intricate  details  of  this  unusual  tropical  flower.

A closer look reveals the remarkable details of Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense. The velvety petals, crisp white edging, and fuzzy pink center give the flower an appearance unlike anything else in the garden. And then comes the scent...

John came back from Bangkok with a few photographs and a fragrance he could not forget. It took us years to track down the plant behind that memory. We have never regretted a single minute of the search.

Sunshine: So after all those years, what's the answer?
Smokey: Stand next to the plant.
Sunshine: That's it?
Smokey: The fragrance explains the rest.

🛒 Grow Enchanted Incense

📚 Learn more from our Blog

Mature  Cerbera  x  manghas  Enchanted  Incense  growing  as  a  landscape  tree 
 beside  a  house.  The  plant  displays  glossy  dark  green  leaves,  bronze-toned 
 new  growth,  and  clusters  of  flowers  and  buds  against  a  bright  blue 
 sky.

A closer look reveals the remarkable details of Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense develops into an attractive small tree with lush evergreen foliage and colorful new growth. In the landscape, it combines year-round structure with clusters of bright redding-pink fragrant flowers that stand out beautifully against the glossy leaves.

Date: 15 Aug 2021

How to grow Cerbera and make it flower

Q: I purchased Cerbera manghas - Enchanted Incense a year ago. As you see from the photo, it's doing great however, no blooms. I fertilize properly and very often and use worm castings for micronutrients. Yes it's not "your" fertilizer, but my plumerias, that are also in pots they are over 5 feet tall and blooming like crazy. I don't see any inflows coming on the Cerbera at all and it is hot and humid here in North Carolina, so it's happy but no sign of blooming. What is your advice?

A: Top Tropicals first brought Cerbera manghas into the US plant market a few years ago, it was recommended to us by our friend, plant taxonomist John Mood who visited Thailand, and among other exotic plants noted this fragrant beauty. Since then we've been successfully growing this plant, it has become one of everybody's favorites.

Generally speaking, Cerbera culture is very similar to Plumerias. These plants are closely related. So if you know how to grow Plumeria, you sure will succeed with Cerbera. Hot and sunny location, well-drained mix, moderate water and bloom boom fertilizer will do the trick. However, we have noticed a few distinctive features that make this plant somewhat challenging at times.

1) Flowers

For past years, we've been studying what triggers its flowering. Sometimes these plants start flowering in 1 gal pot, 1 ft tall. Other times a large developed tree 5-6 ft tall, in 5-7 gal pot, grows beautiful foliage with no signs of flowers. Eventually all of them bloom, no matter how stubborn they are, it's just some individual plants start flowering sooner than others, all grown in the same conditions.
One of our plants in the ground, a well-branched tree, was covered with flowers for a few months, but only on the 3d year after planting. Before that, it only produced a few random blooms. Others bloomed in pots at very young age.
The following factors benefit to Cerbera flowering:
- full sun at least 10 hours a day
- hot temperatures above 85F
- regular water but not heavy rains
- regular fertilizer - Bloom Booster type
- very good drainage and drying out before waterings. If root ball stays moist, the plant may look healthy but won't set flower buds. Keeping on a dry side will encourage flowering. Very similar to Jasmines: they bloom like crazy in April while it's hot and dry in Florida, but once our summer rainy season starts, they reduce blooming.

We highly recommend using Sunshine Megaflor bloom booster or SUNSHINE Pikake in combination with micro-element supplements Sunshine Honey (B-Mo) and Sunshine Superfood (complex micro) that induce flowering. Dry and granulated fertilizers may not supply exactly what a plant needs: certain elements that trigger flowering may be missing. Sunshine Boosters formulas are scientifically balanced, they contain precise amounts of nutrients needed for setting flowers. Besides, excessive salts from regular dry fertilizers create nutrient lock up that may retard plant metabolism; with liquid amino-acid based Sunshine boosters, plants consume the whole menu of elements without building them up in the soil.

2) Fruit

Fruit of Cerbera are very pretty and cover the tree after profuse flowering. To inexperienced eye they may look very much like small mango or avocado fruit - so make sure kids or visitors don't try to eat them! Cerbera seeds are extremely poisonous.

3) Leaves

If you ever grew Passiflora or Milkweed, you know how leaves can be eaten by caterpillars overnight. This may happen to Cerbera too, as we discovered. In Florida environment this exotic plant doesn't have natural predators for protection from certain insect species that may feed on it. So watch out and if noticed first signs of leaves damage - its time for insect control.
Other than that, Cerbera foliage is usually beautiful and colorful, here in Florida it looks much healthier than that of Plumerias often affected with rusty residue during high humidity months.

Hope this helps. The Cerbera fragrance is enchanting, it is worth the efforts and waiting!

Date: 4 Dec 2020

Establishing Cerbera Manghas
after a long shipping trip

Q: I live in Hawaii. I purchased Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense. I followed the repotting instructions but it looks like dying? Is the normal for all the leaves to fall off? I only use purified water to mist and water the plant. I let it dry between watering and still it looks sad. Please help!

A: Cerbera is very sensitive to shipping stress (in particular to darkness) and it often loses leaves in transit. Considering long trip to Hawaii, it had extra 1-2 days in transit, longer than to most of the states. Your plant looks very much alive, however we understand your concern about lost leaves.
You need to treat it like Plumera: keep on a dry side until it starts sprouting new leaf growth. Once it gets re-established, you may move it out into regular irrigation or rain.
We recommend to keep it under roof to control water input, but in very blight spot, preferably sunny.
Make sure the soil doesn't get soggy, too much water may kill the plant especially when it is leafless and hence doesn't consume/evaporate much water.
Water only when top of the soil gets slightly dry.
Do not put into bigger container until roots start growing. The plant should recover and start new growth under proper care. Keep us in loop how the plant is doing!

Date: 22 Aug 2024

What flower is sweeter than any Jasmine

Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense

Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense

Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense

Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense

💥 What flower is sweeter than any Jasmine



🌸 Cerbera x manghas - Enchanted Incense: absolutely NEW perfume plant! It is becoming one of the most wanted in rare fragrant plant market.

🌸 This amazing flower was originally obtained in Thailand.

🌸 Beautiful striped red-and-white flowers are highly fragrant. Fragrance is the most intense you can imagine and is much better than all jasmines and gardenias all together.

🌸 The plant is very similar to plumeria in growth habit (and is close related to Plumeria). It grows into a small tree. Unlike Plumeria, it is evergreen in warm climate.

🌸 Beautiful mauve colored leaves are very ornamental.

🌸 Slow growing, compact plant, great for containers. Very undemanding and has low water needs.

🛒 Get your own Enchanted Incense

#Perfume_Plants #Container_Garden

🔴 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 15 Apr 2026

7 best exotic dwarf trees for maximum impact in small tropical landscapes

Dwarf Pink Princess Silk Floss Tree (Ceiba hybrid)

Dwarf Pink Princess Silk Floss Tree (Ceiba hybrid)

Dwarf Golden Tabebuia (Tabebuia chrysotricha)

Dwarf Golden Tabebuia (Tabebuia chrysotricha)

Little Gem Southern Magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora)

Little Gem Southern Magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora)

Compact Butterfly Jatropha (Jatropha integerrima Compacta)

Compact Butterfly Jatropha (Jatropha integerrima Compacta)

Lignum Vitae (Guaiacum sanctum)

Lignum Vitae (Guaiacum sanctum)

Winter Starburst (Clerodendrum quadriloculare)

Winter Starburst (Clerodendrum quadriloculare)

Enchanted Incense (Cerbera x manghas)

Enchanted Incense (Cerbera x manghas)

7 best exotic dwarf trees for maximum impact in small tropical landscapes 🏡

For a yard that feels like a tropical escape but doesn't have the space for a massive jungle, these seven selections from TopTropicals are game-changers, chosen for their compact size, high "curb appeal," and unique tropical flair.

1. Dwarf Pink Princess Silk Floss Tree (Ceiba hybrid)

🌳 A spectacular grafted hybrid of the famous Silk Floss tree, but in a much smaller package: a unique, often "fat" or bottle-shaped trunk and large, showy pink flowers with white centers.
🏡 Unlike the standard Ceiba which can become a giant, the 'Pink Princess' is grafted to stay compact (usually under 10 - 12 feet), allowing you to enjoy those exotic, orchid-like blooms even in a tiny garden.

Ceiba Plant Facts

Botanical name: Ceiba sp.
Also known as: Ceiba, Floss Silk Tree, Kapok Tree
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Large tree taller than 20 ftFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryYellow, orange flowersRed, crimson, vinous flowersWhite, off-white flowersPink flowersThorny or spinyDeciduous plant
Get personalized tips for your region

👉 more

2. Dwarf Golden Tabebuia (Tabebuia chrysotricha)

🌳 Known as the "Golden Trumpet Tree," this dwarf selection puts on one of the most brilliant displays in the plant kingdom. Before the leaves emerge in spring, the entire tree is covered in bright, trumpet-shaped yellow flowers.
🏡 This specific dwarf form stays much smaller and more manageable than the standard Tabebuias seen on city streets. Its silver-green foliage and rounded canopy make it an ideal "specimen" tree that acts as a focal point for your front yard.

Dwarf Golden Tabebuia Plant Facts

Botanical name: Handroanthus chrysotrichus, Tabebuia chrysotricha, Tabebuia chrysantha
Also known as: Dwarf Golden Tabebuia
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Small tree 10-20 ftFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryYellow, orange flowersDeciduous plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
Get personalized tips for your region

👉 more

3. Little Gem Southern Magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora)

🌳 All the elegance of a classic Southern Magnolia but in a miniaturized version. It has the iconic waxy white, lemon-scented flowers and glossy leaves with fuzzy bronze undersides.
🏡 'Little Gem' is narrow and columnar, typically reaching only 15-20 feet (half the size of the standard species). It starts blooming at a very young age, so you don't have to wait years for those famous fragrant flowers.

Southern Magnolia Plant Facts

Botanical name: Magnolia grandiflora
Also known as: Southern Magnolia, Bull Bay
USDA Zone: 7 - 10
Highligths Small tree 10-20 ftFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryWhite, off-white flowersPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsFragrant plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
Get personalized tips for your region

👉 more

4. Compact Butterfly Jatropha (Jatropha integerrima Compacta)

🌳 This "ever-blooming" small tree is a butterfly magnet. It features clusters of bright, cherry-red star flowers against glossy, fiddle-shaped leaves.
🏡 The Compacta variety is specifically bred to stay bushy and small. It blooms almost 365 days a year in warm climates, providing a constant splash of red that draws in hummingbirds and pollinators.

Peregrina Plant Facts

Botanical name: Jatropha integerrima, Jatropha pandurata
Also known as: Peregrina, Spicy Jatropha, Coral Plant, Physic Nut
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Plant used for bonsaiLarge shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall tree 10-20 ftSemi-shadeFull sunWater Requirement: Low. Allow soil to dry out between wateringsRed, crimson, vinous flowersPink flowersPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsIrritating plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short timeSeaside, salt tolerant plant
Get personalized tips for your region

👉 more

5. Lignum Vitae (Guaiacum sanctum)

🌳 Known as the "Wood of Life," this is one of the slowest-growing trees in the world. It has fine-textured, dark green foliage and produce stunning, small blue flowers that fade to white, followed by bright orange seed pods.
🏡 Because it grows so slowly, it will never outgrow its space. It is extremely hardy, salt-tolerant, and hurricane-resistant, making it a "plant it and forget it" heirloom tree for coastal or small urban lots.

Lignum Vitae Plant Facts

Botanical name: Guaiacum sanctum
Also known as: Lignum Vitae, Tree of Life, Gaiac tree
USDA Zone: 9 - 11
Highligths Plant used for bonsaiSmall tree 10-20 ftSemi-shadeFull sunWater Requirement: Low. Allow soil to dry out between wateringsWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryBlue, lavender, purple flowersEthnomedical 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.Subtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short timeSeaside, salt tolerant plant
Get personalized tips for your region

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6. Winter Starburst (Clerodendrum quadriloculare)

🌳 A visual firework display. The leaves are deep green on top and rich purple underneath. In late winter, it produces massive, 8-inch wide clusters of tubular pink-and-white flowers that look like an exploding star.
🏡 It is easily pruned to a single-trunk tree form. The purple foliage provides "curb appeal" year-round, while the winter blooms provide a much-needed pop of color when other plants are dormant.

Winter Starburst Plant Facts

Botanical name: Clerodendrum quadriloculare
Also known as: Winter Starburst, Fireworks, Clerodendron
USDA Zone: 8 - 10
Highligths Large shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall tree 10-20 ftSemi-shadeShadeFull sunWatering: Moderate. Water when top soil feels dryOrnamental foliageWhite, off-white flowersPink flowersSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
Get personalized tips for your region

👉 more

7. Enchanted Incense (Cerbera x manghas)

🌳 This is a rare, small evergreen tree with glossy, dark green leaves and clusters of highly fragrant, star-shaped white flowers with a red "eye."
🏡 It has an naturally architectural, upright habit. The fragrance is incredible - sweet and heavy - making it a perfect "sensory" tree to plant near a patio where you can enjoy the scent on summer evenings.
👉 more

🛒 Choose small trees for a small yard

📚 Learn more:


Dwarf Ceiba Princess in Plant Encyclopedia
2 most favorite flowering trees for small yards
A small tree of a pure gold
5 small tropical trees that bloom all summer or year around
Center of the world tree that stops traffic in Florida - now fits in a pot
How this breath-taking flowering tree stays so compact

#How_to #Discover #Trees

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals