Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 22 Mar 2026

Do Fruit Trees Increase Property Value? Tropical Plants That Pay Off

Do Fruit Trees Increase Property Value? Tropical Plants That Pay Off Do Fruit Trees Increase Property Value? Tropical Plants That Pay Off Do Fruit Trees Increase Property Value? Tropical Plants That Pay Off
Do Fruit Trees Increase Property Value? Tropical Plants That Pay Off 🏡

Can your backyard pay for itself? Learn which 12 tropical fruit trees real estate experts say are the smartest investment for your landscape. Discover how tropical fruit trees like mango and avocado add "edible equity" and curb appeal to your property, making it more desirable to future buyers. Turn your yard into a private paradise that lowers grocery bills and boosts home value.

In warm climates like Florida, a mango tree isn't just landscaping - it’s a food-producing asset. Mature tropical fruit trees offer "edible equity," saving homeowners hundreds in grocery bills while creating a unique, memorable aesthetic for buyers.

  • 🥭 1. Focus on "Instant Recognition" Favorites


Trees buyers already know and love provide the strongest ROI. They signal that the yard is already productive - something new builds can’t offer.

  • •  Top Picks: Mango, Avocado, Papaya, Banana, Guava, and Loquat.
  • •  The Value: A single mature avocado or mango tree can yield hundreds of pounds of fruit annually.


🥭 2. Create a "Memorable Discovery" with Exotic Varieties



Unusual fruits turn a standard yard into a tropical orchard, acting as a conversation piece during home tours.

  • •  The Exotic List: Jackfruit, Sugar Apple, Soursop, Sapodilla, Ice Cream Bean, and Star Fruit.


🥭 3. Strategic Placement for Energy Savings



Large-canopy trees like jackfruit or mango do more than provide food; they act as natural insulation.

  • •  Natural Cooling: Strategic planting reduces afternoon sun exposure and lowers AC costs.
  • •  Indoor/Outdoor Flow: Use trees to frame window views, block neighbors, and create private "outdoor rooms."


🥭 4. The Power of the "Mini Orchard"



A collection of 3–5 trees creates a stronger emotional pull than a lone plant. Buyers begin to visualize a lifestyle of smoothies and harvests.

  • •  Winning Combos: Mango + Avocado + Papaya or Guava + Star Fruit + Banana.


🥭 5. Maintenance: Health Equals Value



Fruit trees only add value if they look manageable. A neglected tree suggests a neglected home.

  • •  Pre-Sale Prep: Prune for tidiness, mulch the base, and clear fallen fruit.
  • •  Spacing Matters: Avoid overcrowding; ensure buyers can walk comfortably through the yard without feeling "closed in."


🥭 The Long-Term Play



Unlike decorative plants that may need frequent replacement, fruit trees appreciate over time. Because a mango tree takes years to reach peak production, the best time to plant for future resale value is now. By the time you list, your yard will offer shade, privacy, and a harvest that buyers find hard to resist.

🛒 Start Growing Your Edible Equity - Find the Perfect Fruit Tree for Your Yard

📚 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

Mango trees in Plant Encyclopedia

#Food_forest #How_to #Discover

🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

Date: 21 Mar 2026

How to start your dream collection: Adenium rainbow

Adenium Amaryllis

Adenium Amaryllis

Adenium Win

Adenium Win

Adenium Butterfly Yellow

Adenium Butterfly Yellow

Adenium Black Butterfly

Adenium Black Butterfly

Adenium Good Morning

Adenium Good Morning

Adenium Good Night

Adenium Good Night

How to start your dream collection: Adenium rainbow 🌈
  • 👉 Thinking about adeniums? Read this before you buy one!
How to start an adenium collection without wasting money

If you’ve ever seen a tray of different blooming adeniums, you probably had the same thought: "I want them all." And honestly - we get it.

But with hundreds of varieties out there (and only so much space on your patio), the real trick isn’t collecting everything… it’s choosing the right ones and growing them well so they actually bloom like the photos.

Let’s make it simple.

💡 Before you start your adenium collection



A few basics that make all the difference:
  • 🔸 Light. Bright light is key. The more light, the better the blooms.
  • 🔸 Water. Water deeply, then let soil dry out. Adeniums hate sitting wet.
  • 🔸 Fertilizer. Adeniums prefer liquid food. Light, regular feeding with Sunshine Megaflor Bloom Booster during active growth = stronger growth, bigger caudex, and better flowering.
  • 🔸 Trimming. Prune after flowering to shape and encourage branching. More branches = more flowers.
  • 🔸 Soil. Fast-draining mix is a must. No heavy, soggy soil. Use Adenium Soilless Mix.

👉 How to grow a happy Adenium

🌸 Today's featured adeniums



A few standout varieties to start (or expand) your collection:
  •  ✦ Amaryllis: Large, bold blooms with a classic floral shape - one of those that always catches attention.
  •  ✦ Win: Clean, bright blooms with a balanced form - simple and very satisfying.
  •  ✦ Butterfly Yellow: Soft yellow tones with a delicate, airy look - light and cheerful.
  •  ✦ Black Butterfly: Dark, velvety tones with a winged pattern feel - rich and dramatic.
  •  ✦ Good Morning: Bright, fresh tones that feel clean and uplifting - a nice contrast in any group.
  •  ✦ Good Night: Dark, moody tones - a completely different vibe from typical bright adeniums.

If you’re just starting, pick a few different styles - light, dark, bold, soft. That contrast is what makes a collection feel alive.

And fair warning… It rarely stops at six! 😀

🛒 Explore Exotic Thai Adeniums

📚 Learn more:

Plant Facts

Adenium sp.
Adenium, Desert Rose, Impala Lily
USDA Zone: 9-11
Plant with caudexLarge shrub 5-10 ft tallSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunDry conditionsModerate waterYellow, orange flowersRed, crimson, vinous flowersUnusual colorBlue, lavender, purple flowersWhite, off-white flowersPink flowersToxic or Poisonous
  • · Adenium varieties in Plant Encyclopedia
  • · About #Adenium Rainbow - fantastic varieties
  • · How to grow a happy Adenium
  • #Container_Garden #Adeniums #How_to #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 18 Mar 2026

    The Alien Lily: why this rare Peruvian bulb is taking over garden feeds

    Eucrosia bicolor - Peruvian lily

    The Alien Lily: why this rare Peruvian bulb is taking over garden feeds 🔥

    Most bulbs are predictable, but Eucrosia bicolor is a total showstopper. Discover why this rare Peruvian lily looks like a firework and how to grow it.
    • 💥 I planted a simple, nondescript bulb and honestly? I wasn’t prepared for what came out of the soil. This one feels like it belongs in a museum, or on a tiny stage with spotlights!
    • 💥 Eucrosia bicolor is not your typical garden plant - it’s a rare bulb from the dry regions of Peru, and when it blooms, it puts on a theatrical performance. It’s rare, it’s a bit dramatic, and it looks like something designed for a sci-fi movie set.
    Picture this: you’ve got a simple tulip-like bulb sitting quietly for months. Then suddenly, a flower stalk shoots up, and out comes this wild bloom - bright red base with long, thin golden “whiskers” sticking out like fireworks frozen mid-burst. It doesn’t even look real at first glance.
    • 💥 Move over, Orchids: why Peruvian Lily is the ultimate conversation starter



      The Eucrosia bicolor is a rare bulb from the dry forests of Peru. For months, it sits quietly in its pot, looking like a plain onion. But then, the magic happens:

    • · The "Fireworks" Bloom: A tall stalk shoots up, topped with bright red flowers and impossibly long, golden-tipped "whiskers.
    • · The"Museum"Look: The stamens are so long and delicate they look like frozen explosions or a tiny botanical chandelier.
    • · Lush Foliage: Even when it isn't blooming, its broad, soft leaves offer a"Lily of the Valley"elegance that keeps your shelf looking green.


    💥 The"introverted"bulb: why you should stop watering this plant to make it bloom



    Being part of the Amaryllis family, Peruvian Lily has a unique quirk: it craves a"disappearing act."
    It requires a dry dormancy period where it completely dies back.
    It’s essentially a"don't call me, I'll call you"plant.
    But when it decides it's time? It comes back stronger every year.

    💥 Quick Care Guide for Collectors



    How to Master the"Peruvian Performance"? Caring for this rarity is actually quite simple once you understand its rhythm.
    • · Light. Yes, it blooms in shade! To get those museum-quality blooms, you’ll want to place it in a spot with warmth and bright, indirect sunlight - a sunny windowsill is usually its happy place.
    • · Water. During its active growing season, keep the soil moist, but here is the"secret sauce": once the leaves begin to yellow, stop watering entirely. This mimics the dry season in Peru and allows the bulb to rest.
    • · Placement. Because of this specific"on/off"cycle, it’s best kept in a container where you can easily control its environment and move it to a place of honor the moment those firework-like stalks appear.
    • · The Verdict: It’s not a constant bloomer, and that’s exactly why it's special. When that stalk finally appears, it feels like an event. It’s the kind of plant that makes you run to the living room every morning just to see if"today is the day."


    🛒 Find the Peruvian Lily here

    🎥 Close-up of Eucrosia bicolor flower with long golden stamens
    📚 Eucrosia bicolor in Plant Encyclopedia

    #Container_Garden #How_to #Discover

    Plant Facts

    Eucrosia bicolor
    Peruvian Lily
    USDA Zone: 9-11
    Groundcover and low-growing 2ft plantSmall plant 2-5 ftSemi-shadeFull sunModerate waterRed, crimson, vinous flowersSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 16 Mar 2026

    🌱 💪 Green Magic + SUNSHINE Boosters: A Complete System for Strong Plant Growth

    By Tatiana Anderson, Horticulture Expert at Top Tropicals with Smokey & Sunshine help

    Nearly  dead  houseplants  (Dracaena,  Syngonium,  and  Spathiphyllum) 
 recovering  and  growing  vigorously  after  treatment  with  Green  Magic 
 fertilizer  and  Sunshine  Robusta  plant 
 booster.

    Green Magic recovery test with SUNSHINE Robusta support: Dracaena, Syngonium, and Spathiphyllum revived from severe stress and growing vigorously.

    ☀️🌱 Sunshine Boosters: Complete Plant Nutrition

    Sunshine Boosters provide complete plant nutrition, including Calcium and micronutrients that plants need for strong growth. Because nutrients are delivered in liquid form, plants can absorb them quickly and respond almost immediately.

    The Practical Problem

    Liquid feeding works well, but it requires frequent application. In real gardens, many growers simply do not have time to add liquid fertilizer with every watering.

    Green Magic: The Foundation

    Green Magic solves this problem by providing steady background nutrition through controlled-release fertilizer. It feeds plants gradually, so they continue receiving nutrients even between liquid feedings.

    Why This Combination Works

    Together, this system provides both complete nutrition and steady feeding. Sunshine Boosters supply fast nutrients and Calcium, while Green Magic maintains a stable nutrient supply between feedings.

    ✍️ How to Feed Your Plants

    📅 Step 1 – Start of the Growing Season

    • Apply Green Magic around the root zone every 6 months.

      In ground:
      • Small Shrubs (1–3 feet): Use approximately 1/4 to 1/2 cup per plant
      • Established Trees: Use 1/2 lb to 1 lb of product per 1 inch of trunk diameter.
      • Small In-Ground Ornamentals: A common "spoon" rate is roughly 1 teaspoon per gallon of estimated root volume (or per sq. ft. of surface area).
      • Spread evenly around the dripline. Avoid piling the granules against the base or trunk of the plant. For best results, lightly rake the granules into the top 1–2 inches of soil.
      Container plants:
      • Apply 1 tea spoon per 1 gal of soil (mix in with soil) every 6 months during active growth period, or with every re-potting.
    • Water normally after application.
    • Adjustment for Temperature. Because Green Magic is temperature-controlled, adjust your rate if your local climate is extreme:
      • Cooler Climates (<60°F average): Increase the rate by 20% to ensure enough nutrients are released.
      • Hot Climates (> 80°F average): Decrease the rate by 20% to prevent over-releasing as the heat speeds up the process.

    ☀️🌿 Step 2 – Active Growing Season

    • Apply Sunshine Boosters during the growing season.
    • Regular feeding (maintenance): Mix with tap water according to the ratio on the label. For SUNSHINE Robusta use 25 ml (5 tsp)per gallon of water and spray leaves every 5-7 days during active growth.
    • Correction feeding ("medicine" dose): if plants show visible nutrient deficiencies, combine SUNSHINE Robusta with SUNSHINE Superfood and spray every 5–7 days until new growth appears healthy. All SUNSHINE Boosters products are compatible and can be mixed with water in the same sprayer.
    • Best time to spray: early morning or evening when temperatures are cooler and leaves can absorb nutrients efficiently.
    • Important: spray both the top and underside of leaves for maximum absorption.

    Tacca  plant  (bat  flower)  showing  strong  vegetative  growth  and  flower 
 bud  development  in  the  same  season  after  feeding  with  Green  Magic 
 fertilizer.

    Tacca (bat flower) showing vigorous growth and producing flower buds in the same season after feeding with Green Magic.
    Swipe left/right to see all data ↔️

    📊 Seasonal feeding schedule with Green Magic and Sunshine Boosters.

    Season Product Method Goal
    Spring (March) Green Magic Soil Surface 6-month steady nutrient base.
    Growing Season Sunshine Boosters Foliar (Every 5-7 days) Calcium & Bio-available growth power.
    Late Summer Green Magic Soil Surface Replenish foundation for Fall.
    Winter Sunshine Epi Foliar/Drench Cold tolerance and shipping recovery.

    Quick Dose Reference

    • Green Magic: 1 teaspoon per 1 gallon of soil volume.
    • Sunshine Boosters: 25 ml (5 tsp) per 1 gallon of water.
    • Pro Tip: Always spray in the early morning or late evening to prevent leaf scorch and ensure maximum absorption through the stomata.

    ❓Frequently Asked Questions: Plant Nutrition & Fertilizer

    General Fertilizer Concepts

    Why is the"Spring Fertilizer Rush"a problem?
    Most gardeners apply a large amount of traditional fertilizer once in March. This creates a"roller coaster"effect where plants get a sudden spike of nutrients followed by weeks of starvation. This leads to inconsistent growth and potential"fertilizer burn."

    What is"fertilizer burn"?
    Traditional fertilizers are made of soluble salts. When too many salts accumulate around the roots, they actually pull water out of the plant tissues (osmosis), dehydrating the plant and damaging sensitive root tips and leaf edges.

    Is there a difference between"Slow-Release"and "Controlled-Release"?
    Yes.

    • Slow-Release: Relies on natural factors like moisture and soil microbes to break down. It is often unpredictable.
    • Controlled-Release: Uses engineered polymer membranes (like Polyon) to release nutrients at a specific, predictable rate based primarily on temperature.

    Green Magic & Temperature

    How does temperature affect my fertilizer?
    Most fertilizers are lab-tested at 75°F. In hot climates (90°F+), the nutrients release much faster. A"6-month"fertilizer might only last 3 months in the summer heat.

    How should I adjust Green Magic for my local weather?

    • Cooler Climates (<60°F): Increase the application rate by 20%.
    • Hot Climates (> 80°F): Decrease the application rate by 20% to prevent over-releasing.

    The Calcium Gap

    Why doesn't Green Magic contain Calcium?
    Calcium salts are highly soluble and can destabilize the polymer coating used in controlled-release granules. Therefore, most high-quality granules leave Calcium out. You can provide Calcium by using SUNSHINE Boosters

    Why is Calcium so important for new growth?
    Calcium is the"bone"of the plant, building strong cell walls. Unlike other nutrients, it is immobile—the plant cannot move it from old leaves to new ones. If you don't provide a constant supply, new leaves and fruit will emerge distorted or weak.

    Advanced Science & Troubleshooting

    What makes Sunshine Boosters"Bioavailable"?
    Unlike most liquid fertilizers that use EDTA chelators, Sunshine Boosters are amino-acid based. They use organic acids and glycine to escort minerals into the plant, allowing it to incorporate nutrients into its proteins almost immediately.

    Will these fertilizers affect the taste of my fruit?
    No. Sunshine Boosters are made from pharmaceutical-grade components and contain no urea or harmful salts, ensuring your harvest (like Mangoes or Avocados) has a pure, natural flavor without a chemical aftertaste.

    ✨ Green Magic - 15% Off This Week

    Give Your Plants a Strong Start This Spring
    Green Magic - 15% OFF.

    Build the foundation for the entire growing season with a steady, long-lasting nutrient base.

    No coupon needed. The discount is automatically applied at checkout.
    Offer valid through 03/21/2026. Discount applies to Green Magic products only. Not valid on previous purchases and cannot be combined with other promotions or discounts. Offer subject to change without notice.
    Sunshine: So Green Magic feeds the plant for months. Does that mean I can forget about Sunshine Boosters?

    Smokey: Not quite. Green Magic is the steady base diet. Sunshine Boosters are the weekly power drink during active growth.

    Sunshine: Ah. Like my regular meals and donuts on top.

    Smokey: Exactly. Plants eat slowly from Green Magic, and once a week they get a fresh boost.

    Sunshine: Sprinkle once, then boosters every week. The plant grows, I drink coffee, and nobody forgets anything important.

    Smokey: Except where you left the donuts.

    Sunshine: Smokey... nobody forgets donuts. Ever

    🛒 Feed your plants

    ✍️ Learn more about fertilizers

    Date: 16 Mar 2026

    🌞 Spring Nutrition Strategy: How to Identify and Fix Plant Nutrient Starvation

    Smokey  the  tuxedo  cat  holding  a  golden  mango  trophy  next  to  a  giant  mango  while  Sunshine  the  ginger  cat  relaxes  with  coffee  and  donuts  in  a  tropical  garden  contest  scene
    Sunshine: Smokey, I knew from the start you would win. You used Sunshine Boosters and Green Magic. They are named after me, so I had insider knowledge. But my organic program is still good.

    Smokey: Yes, it is good. However, it managed to grow your waistline, not the mango. Starting tomorrow, you begin exercising.

    Sunshine: Exercising? Like running?

    Smokey: No. Pulling weeds.

    Read more about Smokey & Sunshine

    🌱 The Spring Fertilizer Rush

    It's the middle of March. The weather warms up, plants wake up, and gardeners rush to Home Depot to buy fertilizer. We see this every spring: one big feeding, then weeks or months of nothing.

    Tatiana Anderson, horticultural expert from Top Tropicals, reminds gardeners that plants do not eat that way. They grow best when nutrients arrive little by little, not in one giant spring dump. That idea is the science behind Green Magic controlled-release fertilizer usage.

    🎢 The Fertilizer Roller Coaster

    After that big spring feeding, plants usually respond quickly. Leaves turn greener, growth speeds up, everything looks great. But a few weeks later something strange happens. Growth slows down. Leaves lose color. The plant looks hungry again. So gardeners fertilize again.

    This cycle of nutrient spikes followed by starvation is very common with traditional fertilizers. Plants do not like roller coasters. They grow best with steady nutrition.

    🚽 Where Traditional Fertilizers Go

    Traditional fertilizers are usually made from soluble nutrient salts. When you water the soil or when it rains, part of those nutrients dissolve and become available to plants.

    But plants cannot absorb everything at once. The unused portion continues moving with water through the soil. In gardens and container plantings, that excess often travels through drainage and eventually reaches nearby canals, lakes, or rivers causing algae growth.

    These dissolved salts are also the reason gardeners sometimes see what is called "fertilizer burn". When too many salts accumulate around the roots, they can pull water out of plant tissues and damage sensitive roots and leaf edges.

    It is also important to understand that traditional fertilizers are not the same as slow-release fertilizers. Traditional fertilizers dissolve quickly, while slow or controlled-release fertilizers are designed to release nutrients gradually over time.

    This is why large fertilizer applications often lead to two problems: a short nutrient spike for plants and nutrient pollution.

    ⏳ The Idea Behind Slow Release

    Gardeners and scientists recognized this problem a long time ago. If nutrients dissolve too quickly, plants receive a spike and the rest is washed away before roots can use it. The obvious solution was to slow things down. Instead of dumping nutrients all at once, slow-release fertilizers were developed to feed plants gradually over time.

    The goal is simple: keep nutrients in the soil longer and deliver them to plants little by little, closer to the way plants actually grow.

    ⚖️ Slow Release vs Controlled Release

    Not all gradual fertilizers work the same way. There is an important difference between slow-release and controlled-release fertilizers.

    Slow-release fertilizers rely on natural processes such as moisture, temperature changes, soil microbes, or simple coatings that slowly break down. The release rate can vary depending on weather, soil conditions, and watering.

    Controlled-release fertilizers use engineered coatings that regulate how nutrients leave the fertilizer granule. The coating acts like a membrane, allowing nutrients to move out gradually in a more predictable way.

    In simple terms, slow-release fertilizers slow things down, while controlled-release fertilizers are designed to control how nutrients are delivered over time.

    Black  Pepper  plant  (Piper  nigrum)  showing  nutrient  deficiency  before 
 treatment  and  healthy  green  leaves  after  correction  using  Green  Magic 
 fertilizer.

    Black Pepper (Piper nigrum): nutrient deficiency corrected with Green Magic fertilizer.

    🌡️ The 75°F Trap

    Most controlled or slow-release fertilizers are tested under laboratory conditions where soil temperature is around 75°F. But in real gardens, especially in warm climates, soil temperatures can be much higher. Container soil in full sun can easily reach 90°F or more. Higher temperature speeds up chemical and biological processes, including nutrient release from fertilizer coatings.

    As a result, a fertilizer labeled 6-month release at 75°F may actually finish releasing nutrients in about 3 months in hot soil. That means plants receive nutrients too quickly early in the season and then may run short of food later, right when growth is strongest.

    At 90°F and above, the issue is not only faster feeding. The fertilizer coating can release nutrients so quickly that the soil solution becomes highly concentrated with dissolved salts. In containers especially, this sudden surge of salts can pull water away from the roots through osmotic pressure, effectively dehydrating the roots at the exact moment when the plant needs water most. Instead of steady nutrition, the plant experiences a brief nutrient spike followed by stress.

    ⚙️ Why Release Mechanisms Matter

    Different fertilizers use different coating technologies. Some rely on simple coatings that release nutrients mainly in response to moisture. When it rains or the soil stays wet, nutrients are released faster. When the soil dries, release slows down. This moisture-driven mechanism can be unpredictable because it depends heavily on rainfall and watering patterns.

    More advanced fertilizers use membranes designed to regulate nutrient movement based primarily on temperature. Because plant metabolism is closely tied to temperature, this creates a much more scientific and predictable feeding process. As temperatures rise and plants grow faster, nutrients are released more actively. When temperatures drop and plant activity slows, the release rate also slows.

    This scientific, temperature-based mechanism helps deliver nutrients gradually and predictably, reducing the large spikes and sudden shortages that often occur with simpler fertilizer coatings.

    Controlled Release Technology

    Modern controlled-release fertilizers use polymer coatings that act like a thin membrane around each granule. Water enters the granule, nutrients dissolve inside, and then slowly move through the coating into the soil.

    The speed of this process is influenced mainly by soil temperature, which generally follows the plant's natural growth rate.

    Polyon coating technology is known for its very consistent polymer layer, which helps deliver nutrients more evenly from granule to granule. This consistency is one reason controlled-release fertilizers are widely used in professional nurseries and container plant production.

    Green Magic fertilizer uses advanced Polyon controlled-release technology to provide steady background nutrition for plants without the large nutrient spikes common with traditional fertilizers.

    ⚠️ The Calcium Gap

    One nutrient that is often missing from many controlled-release fertilizers is Calcium. Calcium is essential for plant cell structure. It strengthens cell walls and supports healthy development of new leaves, roots, and fruit. In many ways, its role is similar to how calcium supports bone structure in the human body.

    Unlike many other nutrients, Calcium is not mobile inside plants. The plant cannot move it from older leaves to support new growth. This is why calcium deficiency usually appears first in the newest leaves and growing tips. When plants lack calcium, new growth may become distorted, weak, or fail to develop properly because the cells cannot form strong walls.

    Another important detail is that Calcium is not mobile inside plants. Once it becomes part of plant tissue it cannot move to new growth, which is why fresh leaves are the first to show deficiency symptoms.

    No matter how much NPK fertilizer is added, plants cannot grow properly without enough Calcium because new cells simply cannot build their structure.

    Calcium is difficult to include inside polymer-coated fertilizer granules because many calcium salts are highly soluble and can interfere with the stability of the coating.

    For this reason most controlled-release fertilizers focus on delivering nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, while assuming that Calcium will come from irrigation water or soil amendments such as gypsum.

    Garden advice often recommends bone meal as a Calcium source. While bone meal does contain Calcium, it releases very slowly and depends on soil biology and acidity, so it may take months before plants can actually use it. A more reliable Calcium source for many growers is gypsum, which supplies Calcium. However, adding it to container mixes is risky because the correct amount is difficult to control.

    The most reliable way to supply Calcium is simple: use Sunshine Boosters. These liquid fertilizers deliver readily available Calcium directly to plants in soil and in containers, supporting strong new growth and preventing the hidden deficiencies that often limit plant development. We explained this approach in detail in our previous newsletter.

    The Two-Layer Feeding System

    Professional growers rarely rely on a single fertilizer. The most stable approach is combining controlled-release nutrition with targeted liquid feeding.

    Green Magic provides steady background nutrition through Polyon controlled-release technology, supplying nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, and essential microelements gradually over time.

    Sunshine Boosters complement this base feeding by delivering Calcium and additional micronutrients in a form plants can absorb quickly when growth is most active.

    Together they create a balanced system: Green Magic feeds plants continuously, while Sunshine Boosters provide the nutrients that controlled-release fertilizers cannot easily deliver.

    Green Magic builds the foundation, Sunshine Boosters power the growth.

    Amaryllis  'Minerva'  producing  multiple  bright  red  and  white  striped 
 flowers  after  feeding  with  Green  Magic  and  Sunshine  Megaflor  bloom  booster.

    Amaryllis 'Minerva' flowering profusely after feeding with Green Magic and SUNSHINE Megaflor bloom booster.

    🛒 Feed your plants

    Date: 15 Mar 2026

    Adeniums from a world of imagination - where Thai names become living stories

    Adenium Thong Samsee - "Three Colors of Gold"

    Adenium Thong Samsee - "Three Colors of Gold"

    Adenium Ploysai - "Clear Crystal Gem"

    Adenium Ploysai - "Clear Crystal Gem"

    Adenium Bua Sawan - "Heavenly Lotus"

    Adenium Bua Sawan - "Heavenly Lotus"

    Adeniums from a world of imagination - where Thai names become living stories

    Some plants are grown for their flowers. Adeniums are also grown for their names!
    • 🌸 Thong Samsee - "Three Colors of Gold"
    • Golden Adenium blooms in soft yellow, cream, and pink shades - a perfect example of why Thai growers love the word Thong, meaning gold, in plant names that suggest prosperity and good fortune.
    • 🌸 Ploysai - "Clear Crystal Gem"
    • A treasure chest filled with glowing flowers, like precious stones discovered by a lucky explorer. In Thai plant names, Ploy means gemstone - a symbol of beauty and value.
    • 🌸 Bua Sawan - "Heavenly Lotus"
    A vision of Adeniums blooming like lotus flowers in a dream garden. The name suggests purity, beauty, and something that feels almost otherworldly.

    🛒 Explore Exotic Thai Adeniums

    📚 Learn more:


    #Container_Garden #Adeniums #Horoscope #How_to #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 15 Mar 2026

    What Thai Adenium names mean: luck, gold, and mythology

    Cats Smokey and Sunshine in adenium garden

    Cats Smokey and Sunshine in adenium garden

    What Thai Adenium names mean: luck, gold, and mythology 🌸

    Many Adenium hybrids come from Thailand, where breeders often give varieties meaningful and poetic names rather than simple codes. Instead of simple labels like "Red Double #27", Thai breeders often give their flowers names that sound like small poems. These names frequently reference wealth, luck, jewels, mythology, and beautiful colors.

    Once you start recognizing common Thai words, Adenium names become much easier to understand. Some sound almost like short blessings - promising prosperity, beauty, or good fortune.

    Below are examples of Adenium varieties whose names reflect these traditions.
    • 🏯 Thai names related to luck, wealth, and prosperity



      These words are extremely common in Thai plant naming and often suggest good fortune or financial success.



    🏯 Thai names related to gold or wealth (Thong group)



    The word Thong means gold and appears in many Thai plant names associated with value and prosperity.
    • 🏯 Mythological and symbolic creatures

    • Some Adenium names come directly from Thai mythology and sacred animals.


    Hassadee (Hatsadiling) refers to a legendary elephant-bird creature found in Thai mythology.
    • 🏯 Gem and jewel themed names

    These names reflect the Thai tradition of treating ornamental plants like living jewels.

    Blue Diamond
    Chaba Kaew
    Maneenate
    Petch Pratum (Diamond Lotus)
    Ploy Nappan
    Ploy Sakorn
    Ploysai
    Talab Phet

    🛒 Explore Exotic Thai Adeniums

    📚 Learn more:


    #Container_Garden #Adeniums #Horoscope #How_to #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 12 Mar 2026

    ❄️Cold-Hardy Avocados and Fruit Trees

    Three  year  old  macadamia  tree  after  three  nights  of  25F  hard  freeze  in 
 February  2026,  showing  healthy  foliage.

    3 year old macadamia tree after 3 nights of hard freeze in February 2026 - standing strong.

    Earlier in early February we had a rough stretch at the B-Farm in Sebring. Three nights around 25°F with steady wind. Weather like that quickly shows which plants actually belong in Zone 9 and which ones only look good on paper.

    Once things warmed up and we could see the real results, a few clear winners stood out. All of the macadamias handled the cold surprisingly well. The grumichamas stayed solid. And the cold-hardy avocado varieties again proved why gardeners rely on them in borderline climates.

    Instead of listing every tropical plant that might survive a freeze, we decided to keep things practical and focus on the ones that actually went through this cold spell and that we currently have in stock.

    If you garden in USDA Zone 8b-9, these are the kinds of trees that make winter a lot less stressful.

    📖Read the full article: 2026 Freeze Guide: Cold-Hardy Avocados and Fruit Trees.



    📚 Learn more:

    Add Cold Hardy Avocado Tree to your garden

    Date: 12 Mar 2026

    When flowers become legends

    Cartoon caracters with adenium flowers

    Cartoon caracters with adenium flowers

    A Thai dancer with adenium flowers

    A Thai dancer with adenium flowers

    A baby girl with adenium flowers

    A baby girl with adenium flowers

    When flowers become legends
    • 🌸 Thai flower names often sound like characters from a legend - golden spirits, celestial jewels, or lucky guardians of the garden. In Thailand, plants are not always named in a purely botanical way. Instead, breeders often choose names that carry meaning, symbolism, and a little imagination.
    • 🌸 Looking at Adeniums through this lens feels almost magical. A flower can become a jewel, a lotus from heaven, or a golden treasure. The whimsical scenes below capture that spirit - a world where Adeniums bloom like treasures, garden fairies dance among flowers, and every name tells a story waiting to be discovered.


    🛒 Explore Exotic Thai Adeniums

    📚 Learn more:


    #Container_Garden #Adeniums #Horoscope #How_to #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 12 Mar 2026

    How to learn the secret meanings behind Thai flower names

    Cats Smokey and Sunshine in Thai Adenoium garden

    Cats Smokey and Sunshine in Thai Adenoium garden

    How to learn the secret meanings behind Thai flower names 🔮

    If you have ever looked at names of Adeniums or Plumerias from Thailand, you may have noticed something interesting. Many of them sound poetic, mysterious, or even magical. That is not accidental.
    Thai plant breeders often give their hybrids meaningful names connected to jewels, wealth, beauty, and mythology. Instead of simple numbers or codes, the plants receive names that sound like something from a legend - Jade Swan, Golden Lotus, Rainbow Diamond.

    Once you learn a few common Thai words, these names suddenly start to make sense. It is almost like decoding a secret language of flowers.
    Below are some of the most common words you will see in Thai plant names.

    🔠 Glossary of common Thai words used in plant names



    Gems and precious stones 💎

    Anyamanee - precious jewel or rare gem.
    Gaew / Kaew - crystal or glass-like jewel.
    Manee - jewel or gemstone. A classic word in elegant Thai names.
    Noppakao - nine gems, a symbol of royal power and prosperity.
    Petch - diamond. Symbol of brilliance and beauty.
    Ploy - gem or precious stone. Often used for plants considered rare or jewel-like.
    Yok - jade.

    Wealth, luck, and prosperity 💰

    Boon - merit, blessing, good karma.
    Chok - luck or good fortune.
    Kanjana / Kanjamapon - golden or noble.
    Mongkol - auspicious or lucky.
    Paruay / Pa Ruay - to become wealthy or prosperous.
    Ramruay - to become rich or prosperous.
    Sap / Sab - wealth or treasure.
    Sedthee - wealthy person.
    Tawee / Taweechok - to increase or multiply.
    Thong - gold.
    Yod - the best, the peak, or the finest.

    Mythology and cultural symbolism 🐉

    Bua - lotus.
    Chai / Chai Lai - victory or triumph.
    Hassadee - derived from the mythical Hatsadiling, an elephant-bird creature in Thai mythology.
    Hong - mythical swan or phoenix.
    Jai - heart or spirit.
    Maha - great or grand.
    Moradok - heritage, treasure, or legacy.
    Orathai - heart of Thailand or beloved Thai.
    Pratum / Pratuma - lotus blossom.
    Siam - Thailand, the historic name of the country.

    Colors and visual descriptions 🎨

    Chompoo - pink color.
    Lai - patterned or striped.
    Lueng - yellow.
    Moung / Muang - purple color.

    Nature and poetic imagery

    Chaba - hibiscus flower.
    Dao - star.
    Doung - heart, soul, or central essence.
    Fah - sky. Example: Sai Fah - sky-colored.
    Nam - water.
    Namwhan - sweet water or sweetness.
    Natee - river or flowing water.
    Sai - thread, line, or ray.
    Sairung - rainbow.
    Sang Aroon - dawn or sunrise.
    Suree - sun or sunlight.

    🌸 Examples of plant names built from these words



    Once you know the meanings, the names start to read like short poems.

    Hong Yok - Jade Swan
    Ploy Nappan - Celestial Jewel
    Thong Hassadee - Golden Mythical Elephant
    Ped Sairung - Rainbow Diamond
    Som Paruay - Golden Prosperity
    Sai Fah - Sky Blue
    Pratum Thong - Golden Lotus
    Ramruay - Becoming Rich
    Chok Dee - Good Luck
    Thong Yod - Peak of Gold

    You will see these words frequently in the names of Thai-bred Adeniums, Plumerias, Orchids, and other tropical flowers. Once you recognize them, plant names become much easier - and more fun - to understand.

    🛒 Explore Exotic Thai Adeniums

    📚 Learn more:


    #Container_Garden #Adeniums #Horoscope #How_to #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals