Date: 13 Jul 2025
Put it into practice
"Knowledge is of no value unless you put it into practice." - Anton Chekhov
🐈📸 James Coconuts the Cat is at his practice, at TopTropicals.
#PeopleCats #Quotes
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Garden Blog - Top Tropicals
Date: 13 Jul 2025
Date: 13 Jul 2025
Longan - Euphoria longana - tastes a lot like Lychee
Date: 12 Jul 2025
Date: 12 Jul 2025
Avocado Mexicola Grande
Date: 12 Jul 2025
Napoleon's Hat - Napoleonaea imperialis
Date: 11 Jul 2025
Date: 11 Jul 2025
Grumichama Fruit Tree at Top Tropicals Garden
Date: 10 Jul 2025
Date: 10 Jul 2025
Cyathea cooperi - Australian tree fern
Date: 10 Jul 2025
1. Use a 6-10 inch long stem cutting from a mature dragon fruit plant. Let the cut end dry in the shade for 2-5 days so it forms a callus. This also helps prevent rot and fungus.
2. Use well-draining soil - well drained potting mix, Adenium mix, or cactus mix. Dragon fruit hates wet feet!
3. Plant the cutting. Stick the callused end about 2-3 inches deep into the soil. Make sure it's planted upright (the way it grew on the parent plant).
4. Support it. Add a trellis or post. Dragon fruit is a climbing cactus and needs something to grow on.
5. Water lightly. Water once after planting, then wait until the soil dries before watering again. Overwatering can rot the cutting.
6. Give it light and warmth. Place in bright, indirect sunlight while it roots. Once established, it can handle full sun. Watch it grow! Roots usually form in 2-4 weeks. New growth means it's taking off! This is the time to Ferilize it!
Watch the 30-sec video
Shop Dragon Fruits