Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 25 Apr 2026

🎁 Mothers Day plant gift guide: something for every kind of mom

Skip the bouquet, give her something that grows

Four  potted  tropical  plants  in  bloom  -  Magnolia  Little  Gem,  Champaka, 
 Jasmine  Sambac,  and  Plumeria  -  arranged  on  gravel  in  a  garden  setting 
 against  a  light 
 fence.

Magnolia Little Gem, Champaka, Jasmine Sambac, and Plumeria

Some gifts last a few days. These don't. Right now, these plants are at their best in our nursery - full, established, and ready to impress the moment she sees them. This year, give her something that doesn’t fade. Pick a plant that will keep growing, blooming, and reminding her of you long after Mother's Day is over. Here are a few easy ways to choose the right one.

All of these grow well in containers and are beginner-friendly.

1. For moms who love fragrance - give her living perfume ✨

These are the plants people remember. Soft, rich scent that fills the garden, patio, or even a warm evening indoors.

  • Champaka Joy Perfume Tree - the legendary Joy perfume flower - rich, sweet, and unmistakably bubble gum-like.
  • Magnolia Little Gem - the classic Southern magnolia in a smaller form - big, creamy, fragrant blooms that never go out of style.
  • Wrightia religiosa - a sacred Buddhist tree - delicate white flowers with a soft jasmine fragrance that feels calm and refined.
  • href="https://toptropicals.com/store/findname/Jasminum-Sambac.htm?utm_source=mlist" >Jasmine Sambac - intensely fragrant and impossible to ignore - once you have it, you won’t want a garden without it
  • Plumeria - the iconic Aloha flower - bold color, rich perfume, and pure tropical feeling in bloom.
  • Parijat Tree Jasmine (Nyctanthes arbor-tristis) - blooms at night and fills the air with a gentle, unforgettable fragrance.

🛒 Shop Perfume plants

2. For easy care and everyday enjoyment - beautiful, low maintenance choices 🌸

  • Jatropha podagrica - Buddha Belly - a quirky caudex plant with a swollen trunk and bright red flowers that shows character without needing much care.
  • Dorstenia bahiensis - Mattress Button Plant - a strange, sculptural plant with flat, button-like blooms that always gets people curious.
  • Columnea - Flying Goldfish Plant - trailing stems covered in bright orange flowers that look just like little goldfish in motion.
  • Adeniums - collectible forms in many colors - bold caudex shapes and striking blooms, easy to grow and hard to stop collecting.

🛒 Shop Indoor Garden

3. For the plant collector - rare, unusual, unforgettable 🔮

For moms who already have a garden... and still want something different.

  • Rainbow Eucalyptus - a one-of-a-kind tree with peeling bark that reveals streaks of green, orange, red, and purple like living artwork.
  • Tacca Bat Head Lily - an unforgettable plant with dark, bat-shaped flowers and long whiskers that look almost unreal.
  • Dwarf Ceiba Princess - a rare, compact silk floss tree with a sculptural trunk and soft, showy blooms that feel truly special.

🛒 Shop Rare Plants

4. For the fruit lover - grow something she can enjoy and taste 🍒

A gift that turns into harvest. Fresh fruit, right from her own garden.

  • Jaboticaba - a truly unique fruit tree that produces sweet, grape-like fruit right on the trunk, turning it into a conversation piece.
  • Rose Apple - crisp, refreshing fruit with a light floral taste and a beautiful ornamental tree to match.
  • Java Plum (Jambolan) - deep purple fruit with a sweet-tart flavor, loved for both its taste and its shade tree presence.
  • Mango - the king of tropical fruit - rich, sweet, and incredibly rewarding to grow in your own garden.
  • Avocado - creamy, nutrient-rich fruit from a tree that becomes a long-term staple in the garden.
  • Eugenia cherries - Surinam Cherry, Rio Grande and Grumichama - compact trees with glossy foliage and delicious, dark cherries that are easy to grow and quick to fruit.

🛒 Shop Fruit trees and edibles

Potted  tropical  fruit  trees  including  jaboticaba,  Wax  jambu,  Java  plum,
   mango,  avocado,  and  Eugenia  cherries  arranged  in  a  nursery  setting  on 
 gravel.

Tropical fruit trees selection - from Jaboticaba fruiting on the trunk to Mango, Avocado, and rare Eugenia cherries - a great mix for building a productive food forest.

Mothers Day Gift Card 💌

Mother’s  Day  themed  Top  Tropicals  gift  certificate  with  a  pink 
 decorative  frame  filled  with  jasmine,  plumeria,  magnolia,  and  champaka 
 flowers,  tropical  fruits  across  the  center,  and  a  Happy  Mothers  Day  banner 
 at  the  top,  with  space  for  certificate  details  and 
 message.

Mother’s Day Top Tropicals gift certificate

Still not sure what to choose? A gift card keeps it simple. She can pick exactly what she wants, when she is ready for it. No guessing, no pressure - just something she will actually enjoy.

Get 15% extra value on gift certificates. Just mention Mother’s Day in the message field. For example, a $100 certificate becomes $115. A $50 certificate becomes $57.50.
Offer valid through 05/12/2026.
Bonus value applies to gift certificates only. Must include “Mother's Day” in the message field at checkout. Not valid on previous purchases and cannot be combined with other promotions or discounts. Offer subject to change without notice.

Date: 25 Apr 2026

♥️ Mother’s Day: More Than a Gift

Smokey  cat  with  glasses  showing  mango  tree  to  mother  cat  in  garden
Mom: You grew this… for me? You remembered my favorite…
Smokey: I did.
Mom: You never forget what matters. It’s beautiful.
Smokey: Not as much as you. Happy Mother’s Day.
Sunshine: You raised him right. It shows.

Some things stay with you from your mom.

A favorite fruit. A smell from the garden. The way she showed you how to care for something and stick with it.

At the time, it felt small. Later, you realize it wasn’t. It turns into something real - a tree, a habit, a way of doing things you still follow.

Mother’s Day is simply a reason to tell your mom you remember. To say thank you for what she taught you, and to show your love.

It does not have to be complicated. Just something that makes it clear you were paying attention.

If you are thinking what to give, start simple.

A fruit she loves. A plant she will enjoy watching grow. Something alive, not just something that sits on a shelf.

It does not have to be big. What matters is that it means something to her.

And maybe, years from now, it becomes one of those things that stays.

We put together a few plants that make good Mother’s Day gifts.

Fragrant flowers. Fruit trees she can enjoy year after year. Easy growers that do not require much effort.

If she has a favorite, start there. If not, pick something simple and reliable.

🛒 Shop Gift plants

Date: 25 Apr 2026

Ackee baked rice: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Ackee baked rice: quick-n-fun exotic recipes Ackee baked rice: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

🍴 Ackee baked rice: quick-n-fun exotic recipes


  • 🔴Fold cooked ackee gently into warm, seasoned rice with a pinch of salt and a little oil or butter.
  • 🔴Spread into a baking dish and bake until the top turns lightly crisp and golden.
  • 🔴Scoop while warm - soft inside, slightly crisp on top, simple and satisfying.


🌿 About the plant:


When properly harvested and prepared, ackee has a mild, buttery texture often compared to scrambled eggs. It contains healthy fats and is a staple ingredient in Caribbean cooking.

🏡 In the garden:


Trees require consistent warmth and do not tolerate frost. Mature trees can produce generously in suitable climates with minimal intervention.

🛒 Plant Ackee tree and harvest fruit you can't get from the store!

📚 Learn more:

Plant Facts

Blighia sapida, Cupania sapida
Akee, Ackee, Seso Vegetal, Arbre a Fricasser (Haiti)
USDA Zone: 9-11
Large tree taller than 20 ftFull sunModerate waterEdible plantPlant attracts butterflies, hummingbirdsSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time

📱 What is Akee - Jamaica's National Fruit - and how to grow it
📱 How to cook perfect Akee?

#Food_Forest #Recipes

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 24 Apr 2026

Bold reds and ruby tones - plumerias with real intensity

Bold reds and ruby tones - plumerias with real intensity Bold reds and ruby tones - plumerias with real intensity Bold reds and ruby tones - plumerias with real intensity Bold reds and ruby tones - plumerias with real intensity
Bold reds and ruby tones - plumerias with real intensity. Feeding tip 🌈

This set is all about depth, richness, and that unmistakable red glow. From ruby shades to deep velvety tones, these plumerias bring strong color and a luxurious feel - the kind that instantly draws your eye.

🌸 Today's featured plumerias:


  •  ✦ Plumeria Maneerat - golden-yellow center fading into creamy tones and strong pink to red edges, creating a radiant, glowing effect. Full, layered blooms with a rich, jewel-like look.
  •  ✦ Plumeria Siam Ruby - deep ruby pink petals with softer rosy highlights and a luminous center. Smooth, rounded blooms with a polished, gemstone feel.
  •  ✦ Plumeria Red Siam - rich, velvety red flowers with deep, consistent color and a soft satin finish. Dense clusters create a bold, classic tropical look.
  •  ✦ Plumeria Kled Tabtim - vibrant pink petals deepening toward a warm orange-red center, outlined with a clean white edge. Bright, refined, and glowing with a ruby-like effect.


💡 Plumeria tip: feeding for flowers



Plumerias are heavy feeders, especially when actively growing.
Use a fertilizer higher in phosphorus to push blooming.
Liquid feeding like Sunshine Megaflor can be used regularly, while a controlled release like Green Magic gives steady nutrition over time.

🛒 Shop Plumeria Collection and Enjoy the fragrant blooms

📚 Learn more:
🎥 How to get endless Plumeria Blooms

#Perfume_Plants #Container_Garden #How_to #Discover #PlumeriaRainbow

Plant Facts

Plumeria alba
Dwarf Plumeria
USDA Zone: 9-11
Large shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunModerate waterWhite, off-white flowersFragrant plant
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 23 Apr 2026

Mango Rainbow: Coconut Carrie - big flavor in a condo-size tree

Mango Rainbow: Coconut Carrie - big flavor in a condo-size tree
Mango Rainbow: Coconut Carrie - big flavor in a condo-size tree 🌈

  • 🥭 Carrie is one of the best-tasting mangoes you can grow, period.

  • 🥭 Carrie is a compact Florida mango with insanely rich, sweet, and aromatic flavor - completely fiberless with a deep orange, melting texture and a hint of spice. It may not be flashy on the outside, but once you taste it, you’ll understand why so many growers swear by it.

  • 🥭 As a true Condo Mango, Carrie stays naturally small with a dense, manageable canopy and minimal pruning. It’s perfect for containers, patios, and small yards, while still producing reliably year after year. More 👉


🛒 Shop Mango varieties

📚 Learn more:
#Food_Forest #Mango #Mango_Rainbow

Plant Facts

Mangifera indica
Mango
USDA Zone: 9-11
Large tree taller than 20 ftSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunModerate waterYellow, orange flowersPink flowersEdible plantSeaside, salt tolerant plant
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 23 Apr 2026

Dwarf plumerias - big blooms in small spaces

Dwarf plumerias - big blooms in small spaces Dwarf plumerias - big blooms in small spaces Dwarf plumerias - big blooms in small spaces Dwarf plumerias - big blooms in small spaces
Dwarf plumerias - big blooms in small spaces. Sun tip 🌈

Not every plumeria needs to grow into a large tree. These dwarf varieties stay compact, branch well, and bloom generously - making them perfect for pots, patios, and even indoor growing in cooler climates. Small size, same tropical feel.

🌸 Today's featured plumerias:


  •  ✦ Plumeria obtusa Singapore Yellow Dwarf - creamy white flowers with a soft yellow center and long, slender petals that create a light, star-like shape. Compact, glossy, and very refined.
  •  ✦ Plumeria obtusa Singapore Pink Dwarf - creamy white blooms with a warm yellow center and a soft pink edge. Naturally compact, branching well and flowering heavily, ideal for containers.
  •  ✦ Plumeria obtusa Alba, Singapore White, Dwarf - classic pure white flowers with a gentle yellow center and thick, smooth petals. Clean, polished look on a compact plant that blooms generously.
  •  ✦ Plumeria Doung Suree Dwarf - glowing orange blooms blending from golden apricot to deeper sunset tones. Compact and very floriferous, bringing strong tropical color in a small form.


💡 Plumeria tip: sun is everything



Full sun is the secret to strong growth and blooms. Outdoors is best.
If indoors, give the brightest spot you have and move it outside whenever possible. More sun = more flowers.

🛒 Shop Plumeria Collection and Enjoy the fragrant blooms

📚 Learn more:
🎥 How to get endless Plumeria Blooms

#Perfume_Plants #Container_Garden #How_to #Discover #PlumeriaRainbow

Plant Facts

Plumeria alba
Dwarf Plumeria
USDA Zone: 9-11
Large shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunModerate waterWhite, off-white flowersFragrant plant
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 22 Apr 2026

Mango Growing Guide

Mango Growing Guide
Mango Growing Guide 🥭

Growing mangoes at home is easier than most people think.

You don’t need a big yard. You don’t need perfect conditions.
You just need the right variety - and a few simple rules.

  • 🔻Small space? Go with condo mango varieties
  • 🔻Full sun is key
  • 🔻Water deep, then let it dry
  • 🔻Prune to keep trees compact and productive

Most store mangoes are picked early.
Homegrown fruit - completely different experience.
Sweeter, richer, and actually worth the wait.
Start with the basics, keep it simple, and your mango tree will reward you.

🛒 Explore Mango varieties

📚 Learn more:

Plant Facts

Mangifera indica
Mango
USDA Zone: 9-11
Large tree taller than 20 ftSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunModerate waterYellow, orange flowersPink flowersEdible plantSeaside, salt tolerant plant

#Food_Forest #Mango #How_to

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 22 Apr 2026

April 22 - Earth Day!

April 22 - Earth Day!
April 22 - Earth Day! 🌎

This is a simple reminder that every step counts!
You can go all in and plant a real tree, work the soil, and grow something that will last for years.
Or you can start small, with a single plant and a simple moment that gets you outside and thinking differently about your space.
Both matter.
The difference is not in the intention, but in what happens next.
A small start is fine - as long as it turns into something real.

Sunshine: It’s Earth Day - this counts as planting, right?
Smokey: I’m sure the Earth appreciates the thought.

📚 Learn more:


About Smokey and Sunshine

🛒 Shop tropical flowers and plants

#PeopleCats

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 22 Apr 2026

Secrets of Real Mango Flavor

Top-down  view  of  a  white  tray  filled  with  assorted  mango  varieties  in 
 different  shapes  and  colors,  including  green,  yellow,  red,  and  orange, 
 arranged  outdoors  on  a  textured  surface.

A colorful mix of mango varieties - different shapes, colors, and flavors all in one harvest.

Mango Practical Growing Tips (Keep It Simple)

  • Sun: Full sun is key. 6–8+ hours daily for best growth and fruiting.
  • Soil: Excellent drainage is critical. In pots, use well-draining mix with added perlite or sand. Mango does not like wet roots.
  • Watering: Water deeply, then let soil dry slightly before watering again. Avoid constantly wet soil.
  • Containers: Excellent for pots. Condo mango varieties stay compact and are easy to manage on patios.
  • Feeding: Light but consistent feeding during active growth makes a big difference. Use controlled-release Green Magic for steady nutrition, and supplement with liquid Sunshine Boosters Mango Tango during warm months to push growth and fruiting.
  • USDA Zones: Best suited for Zones 9b–11. In Zone 9b, choose a warm, protected microclimate (south-facing wall, patio, or near structures) and be prepared to protect during cold snaps. In Zones 10–11, mango grows reliably in-ground. If you live in colder zones, grow in a pot so you can move the tree indoors or protect it during cold weather.
  • Cold Protection: Protect young trees during cold nights. Use cover or place near a wall or warm microclimate. Mature trees are more tolerant.
  • Airflow: Good airflow helps prevent disease and keeps growth clean.
  • Spacing: Give the tree room for light and airflow. Even compact trees benefit from space.

Mango  tree  Van  Dyke  growing  in  an  orchard,  loaded  with  ripening  mango 
 fruits,  surrounded  by  mulch  and  irrigation,  under  a  bright  blue  sky  with 
 scattered  clouds.

A fruiting mango tree Van Dyke in the grove, heavy with developing mangoes and enjoying full sun.

Mango Winter Care (Very Important)

Mango is not a truly cold-hardy plant. It performs best in USDA Zone 9b and warmer, where freezes are rare and short. In borderline areas, winter protection becomes part of the routine. Mango trees should be covered during cold nights, and planting near a south-facing wall helps protect from cold winds. That small microclimate can make a real difference. If your winters are less predictable, growing mango in a container becomes the simplest solution. It gives you full control — you can move the tree to a protected space when temperatures drop, and bring it back into the sun when conditions improve.

That is where condo mango varieties make the most sense. They are naturally compact, easier to manage in pots, and still produce full-size, high-quality fruit. You get all the benefits of a mango tree without needing a large yard or perfect climate — just sun, a container, and a bit of seasonal movement when needed.

📚 Mango tips from our Blog

Growing Mango in a Pot (Condo Mango Made Easy)

Young  mango  tree  growing  in  a  large  black  nursery  pot,  supported  with 
 stakes  and  drip  irrigation,  bearing  several  green  mango  fruits,  set  in  a 
 lush  garden  with  flowering  shrubs  and  a  sunny  lawn  in  the  background.

Young mango tree in a container, already holding fruit and thriving in a sunny garden setting.

Growing mango in a container is one of the easiest ways to control size, soil, and winter protection. Condo mango varieties stay naturally compact and adapt well to pots, making them ideal for patios, small spaces, or colder climates. You get full flexibility — move the tree when needed, manage its growth, and still enjoy real tree-ripened fruit.

  • Pot size: Start with 3–7 gallon, move up to 15–25 gallon as the tree grows.
  • Soil: Use fast-draining mix such as Abundance soilles mix.
  • Sun: Place in full sun. More light = better growth and fruiting.
  • Watering: Water deeply, then let soil dry slightly before next watering.
  • Feeding: Use controlled-release Green Magic for steady nutrition, plus liquid Sunshine Boosters Mango Tango during active growth.
  • Climate Flexibility: Can be grown in any USDA zone when kept in a container. Simply move indoors or to a protected area during cold weather to keep the tree safe.
  • Pruning: Light pruning keeps the tree compact and productive.

Once you taste a real mango from your own tree, everything changes. It is no longer something you buy — it is something you grow, wait for, and look forward to every season. What felt like hype suddenly makes sense. The passion people have for mango is not exaggerated — it just comes from a completely different experience.

And for people who have never tasted a fresh, juicy mango warmed by the sun, that moment comes as a surprise — the first time they realize what mango is actually supposed to taste like.

As Smokey quietly puts it: Now you know.

📚 More about Condo Mango

🛒 Shop Condo Mango

Landscape  infographic  showing  how  to  cut  a  mango  in  five  steps.  Step  1 
 -  slicing  along  each  side  of  the  pit.  Step  2  -  separating  the  two  cheeks  and
    the  pit.  Step  3  -  scoring  the  mango  flesh  in  a  grid  pattern.  Step  4  - 
 turning  the  cheek  inside  out  to  create  cubes.  Step  5  -  scooping  or  slicing 
 the  cubes  to  eat.  Bright  yellow  background  with  whole  and  cut  mangoes  and 
 green  leaves  decorating  the  layout.

Simple step-by-step guide to cutting a mango into clean, easy cubes - from slicing off the cheeks to popping and scooping the fruit.

🎥 Watch Mango videos

🛒 Shop Mango Trees

Close-up  of  a  cluster  of  ripening  mangoes  hanging  from  a  branch, 
 showing  red  and  purple  blush  tones  against  a  blurred  outdoor  background.

Cluster of ripening mangoes developing rich color on the tree just before harvest.

Taste the Mango Difference - Save 10%

Once you taste a real mango from your own tree, everything changes. Now you know. Get 10% off with coupon code MANGO2026 on 3 gal mango trees.
Offer valid through 04/28/2026.
Discount applies to 3 gal plants only. Not valid on previous purchases and cannot be combined with other promotions or discounts. Offer subject to change without notice.

Date: 22 Apr 2026

When Mango Ripens on the Tree, Everything Changes

Smokey  and  Sunshine  enjoying  fresh  homegrown  mango  harvest  in  garden
Sunshine: Never understood the passion for mango. I tried store mangoes. I really tried. Just disappointment. So this is what real mango is supposed to taste like?

Smokey: Now you know.

There is a moment when a mango is perfectly ripe — soft to the touch, warm from the sun, fragrant before you even cut it open. The skin gives way, and suddenly there is color, juice, and a sweetness that feels almost unreal. Not sugary, but deep and layered, like something that took its time to become what it is. In that moment, it feels less like fruit and more like something truly given, exactly as it should be.

What you find in most supermarkets is something else entirely. Picked early so it can survive shipping, it never gets the chance to finish ripening process. It softens, it turns yellow, but the depth never comes. The flavor stays thin, and the texture often turns fibrous — strings in the flesh that get stuck in your teeth instead of melting away. That fiber is not an accident. It helps the fruit stay firm enough to handle transport without damage. It looks like a mango, but it never becomes one.

The only way to close that gap is simple — let the fruit ripe where it belongs. On the tree. When you grow your own mango, you control that moment. You pick it when it is actually ready, not when it has to survive a truck ride across the country. And that one difference is everything you taste.

Close-up  of  a  hand  holding  a  mango  cheek  while  scoring  the  bright 
 orange  flesh  into  a  grid  pattern  with  a  knife,  with  whole  mangoes  in  the 
 background.

Scoring a mango cheek into cubes - the easiest way to prepare clean, ready-to-eat pieces.

📚 Learn more about mango varieties

🛒 Shop Mango Trees

Educational  infographic  titled  mango  growing  guide  showing  beginner 
 tips  for  growing  mango  trees,  including  sweet  fiberless  varieties,  dwarf  and
    semi-dwarf  options  for  containers,  planting  tips,  pruning  advice,  watering,
    sunlight,  and  fertilizing  recommendations,  with  illustrated  mango  trees  and
    fruit.

Quick beginner guide to growing mango trees - from choosing the right variety to pruning, watering, and container growing tips.