Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

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Longevity and Okinawa Spinach. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Longevity and Okinawa Spinach

🌿 Longevity and Okinawa Spinach

https://youtube.com/watch?v=2umYNrSjb5U

🛒 Add Logevity Spinach to your kitchen windowsill

📚 Learn more:
Gynura procumbens in Plant Encyclopedia

#Food_Forest #Remedies #Container_Garden

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9 tropical vegetables to grow indoors, or how to have garden-fresh produce all year. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

9 tropical vegetables to grow indoors, or how to have garden-fresh produce all year

9 tropical vegetables to grow indoors

9 tropical vegetables to grow indoors

🌱 9 tropical vegetables to grow indoors, or how to have garden-fresh produce all year

Cold weather does not have to mean the end of homegrown food. According to Southern Living, vegetables like lettuce, carrots, and radishes can be grown indoors during winter. The downside is that most of these are annuals - you harvest once, then start over.

Tropical vegetables work differently. Many are perennial, long-living plants that grow well in containers and keep producing for years. Grow them indoors year-round, move them outside in summer for extra sun and growth, then bring them back indoors before cold weather. With enough light and regular care, these plants can provide fresh harvests in every season.
  • Tips for growing tropical vegetables indoors

  • 📍Place plants near a bright window or supplement with grow lights for steady growth
  • 📍Use containers with good drainage and quality potting mix
  • 📍Keep plants away from cold drafts and heating vents
  • 📍Rotate pots and prune regularly to encourage fresh, tender growth
  • 📍Feed regularly with natural Sunshine Boosters - they are formulated for edibles


Tropical vegetables to grow indoors
  • 🌿 Gynura procubens - Longevity Spinach, Cholesterol spinach - a fast-growing leafy green often called a superfood. The tender leaves are used fresh or lightly cooked and can be harvested repeatedly. This plant stays compact, handles containers easily, and regrows quickly after cutting.
  • 🌿 Sauropus androgynus - Katuk, Tropical Asparagus. One of Southeast Asia’s most popular leafy vegetables. Katuk produces edible shoots and leaves that are cooked in soups and stews. It grows well indoors and rewards regular harvesting with constant new growth.
  • 🌿 Cymbopogon citratus - Lemon grass: a tough, productive plant that adapts well to container growing. The stalks and leaves are used for teas, soups, and flavoring. Indoors, it grows more slowly but stays productive, especially when moved outdoors in summer.
  • 🌿 Lippia dulcis - Aztec Sweet Herb, Sweetleaf: a low-growing herb with naturally sweet leaves. The foliage can be eaten fresh or used as a sugar substitute in teas and desserts. It stays compact, tolerates pruning, and performs well in pots indoors.
  • 🌿 Piper sarmentosum - Vietnamese Pepper, Lalot: grown for its aromatic, edible leaves rather than peppercorns. The leaves are eaten fresh, cooked, or used as food wraps. This plant stays manageable indoors with light pruning.
  • 🌿 Piper nigrum - Black Pepper: the true black pepper vine. Grows well indoors as a container vine with support. It prefers warm temperatures, steady moisture, and bright filtered light.
  • 🌿 Piper auritum - Root Beer Plant, False Kava-Kava: close relative of Piper methysticum (Kava-Kava) known for its large, fragrant leaves with a spicy, root beer-like aroma. The leaves are used for wrapping foods and flavoring dishes. Best grown indoors with room for its bold foliage.
  • 🌿 Piper betle - Betel leaf: a traditional edible and medicinal leaf used widely in Asia. The glossy leaves are harvested continuously and used fresh or as wraps. This vine grows well indoors with warmth, humidity, and a small trellis.
  • 🌿 Piper longum - Indian Long Pepper, Pippali, Bengal Pepper: A tropical pepper relative grown for its elongated spice fruits and edible leaves. Slower to fruit indoors but easy to maintain as a leafy spice plant in containers with bright light and regular feeding.


Tropical vegetables make indoor gardening more rewarding because they do not stop after one harvest. With containers, light, and basic care, these plants can become long-term food producers that move seamlessly between indoors and outdoors - keeping fresh flavors within reach all year.

🛒 Explore tropical edibles, herbs and spices

📚 Learn more:

🎥 Karkade Tea
Longevity Spinach


#Food_Forest #Remedies #Container_Garden #How_to #Discover

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The secret New Deal Franklin Roosevelt never told you about. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

The secret New Deal Franklin Roosevelt never told you about

Schlumbergera x New Deal - Thanksgiving-to-Easter blooming Cactus

🌸 The secret New Deal Franklin Roosevelt never told you about
  • 🌸 Schlumbergera x New Deal is not your regular Christmas cactus. Big blooms, long history. This heirloom flowers from Thanksgiving to Easter and descends from a plant first sold on the very day Franklin Delano Roosevelt was elected.

  • This variety actually vanished from the trade for decades. Its first known appearance was at a rare plant sale at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden on November 8, 1932 - the exact day Franklin Roosevelt won the presidency and launched the famous New Deal. The name stuck, and so did the legend!
  • 🌸 What makes New Deal so special? The blooms are huge - about an inch larger than standard holiday cactus flowers - and come in brilliant violet-pink and white. And the timing is even better. It sends up a full flush around Thanksgiving and Christmas, then wakes up again with a second wave closer to Easter. That’s why some people call it a Thanksgiving cactus, others call it a Christmas cactus, and many insist it’s an Easter cactus. The truth? It’s all three.
  • 🌸 Despite its pedigree, New Deal is surprisingly easy to grow. It thrives in normal houseplant conditions, stays compact, and rewards even casual care with heavy, reliable blooming.
  • 🌸 The plants available today come from true descendant cuttings of an original 1932 specimen that is still alive. This makes New Deal one of the rarest, most authentic holiday cactus cultivars you can own - a living slice of history and one of the most generous bloomers of the entire holiday season.


🛒 Get the New Deal: the Thanksgiving-to-Easter bloomer

📚 Learn more:

#Container_Garden #Shade_Garden #Nature_Wonders

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SOS! A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

SOS!

Magnolia champaca, the Joy Perfume Tree

🆘 SOS! Why is my Champaka Tree dropping leaves?
  • ✔️ Magnolia champaca, the Joy Perfume Tree, can look a little rough in Winter through early Spring. The leaves may yellow, drop, and make the whole tree look tired. Many gardeners think something went wrong, but this is completely normal. Champaka is semi-deciduous, which means it sheds leaves for a short period during cooler months, even in warm climates.
  • ✔️ This is also the time when the tree sets its seeds for spring. As long as you keep your regular watering routine and don’t overreact with extra fertilizer or pruning, the tree rebounds in Spring. Within a few weeks it pushes fresh new foliage and starts blooming again, filling the air with that unmistakable sweet fragrance.
  • ✔️ Champaka isn’t declining - it’s just taking a winter nap!


🛒 We always have them for you: Joy Perfume Champaka trees

📚
Learn more:

📱

#Perfume_Plants #Container_Garden #Trees

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Can Poinsettia grow for years? 5 most common mistakes with new container plants. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Can Poinsettia grow for years? 5 most common mistakes with new container plants

Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima tree

Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima tree

Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima colorful leaves

Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima colorful leaves

Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima in a pot

Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima in a pot

Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima bush

Poinsettia - Euphorbia pulcherrima bush

Can Poinsettia grow for years? 5 most common mistakes with new container plants.

You buy a beautiful plant from a big garden center, or maybe you received one as a holiday gift. It looks perfect - lush, bushy, colorful, spotless. But a few weeks later… what happened? It is dropping leaves, getting leggy, or simply dying. Think about poinsettias after Christmas - most end up in the trash like annuals. But poinsettias are actually perennial shrubs that live for many years in their native environment!

So what went wrong? Here are simple ways to avoid these disappointments and keep your new plants as happy as they were in the greenhouse - and even help them grow bigger and nicer for a long time.
  • Do not put a plant directly into hot, bright sun.

  • Most nursery plants are grown in filtered light under shade cloth, and sudden full sun can burn the leaves.

Move sun-loving plants gradually into full sun.
  • Do not rely on the original container.

  • Holiday and gift plants often come in decorative pots that have issues:
    - no drainage holes
    - glazed or heavy plastic that traps moisture and causes root rot
    - dry, porous terra cotta that loses moisture too fast
    - cone-shaped pots that hold water and create waterlogging
    - pots that are simply too big or too small for the root system

Use simple black nursery pots with straight sides.
They:
- hold moisture at the right level
- are made of safe professional-grade plastic
- make it easy to remove the root ball when stepping up
For a fancy display, place the black pot inside a decorative planter. It will also act as a saucer to collect excess water - no stress, no mess.
  • Do not skip checking the soil. Even plants from professional growers can hide surprises:

  • - the plant may be buried too deep. Large nurseries sometimes add extra soil on top to make the pot look full, but burying the stem can kill the plant in days.
    - soil type on top may be wrong. They may pack peat moss or sphagnum on top to keep stems tight for display.
    - the entire soil media might be temporary. Many orchids in stores, for example, sit in glazed pots stuffed with soggy sphagnum - not how orchids should grow.

Take the plant out of the pot and inspect the roots and soil.
Remove excess peat or sphagnum. Use a quality, well-drained mix like Abundance and repot into a container that matches the root size or is just slightly larger.
  • Do not forget fertilizer.

  • Your plant came from a professional nursery where it likely received constant feeding through a liquid injection system - almost like being on life support. Once removed, it can decline within weeks.

Put your plant on a regular fertilizer schedule.
When repotting, mix in Green Magic controlled-release fertilizer and refresh it every 6 months. Simple and easy! You can also apply liquid Sunshine Boosters - safe to use with each watering.

Do not ignore individual plant needs.
Take a moment to ask what the plant prefers and what to avoid, when buying from a nursery where you can talk to a grower, like Top Tropicals. The grower knows exactly how it was grown and what it likes. Getting a plant is like adopting a baby - knowing its habits makes all the difference!

🛒 Select plants for containers

#How_to #Container_Garden

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Lemon Candy Tree. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Lemon Candy Tree

🍋 Lemon Candy Tree

🟡 Garcinia edulis - Lemon Drop Mangosteen, Madrono. Tiny yellow-orange globes, golf-ball size, with clear, juicy pulp, and when you taste it, you understand the name instantly. Sweet and tart at the same time, like someone turned a lemon drop candy into a tropical fruit. Today Chiane and Ashley are going to taste the fruit and share with your their experience!

📱

#Food_Forest #Container_Garden

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Little tree that makes lemon candy. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Little tree that makes lemon candy

Garcinia edulis - Lemon Drop Mangosteen, Madrono

🍋 Little tree that makes lemon candy
  • 🟡 Garcinia edulis - Lemon Drop Mangosteen, Madrono - is one of those plants that doesn’t shout for attention, but when you stop and really look at it, you realize how special it is. And today Chiane and Ashley are going to taste the fruit and share their experience!
  • 🟡This tree stays compact and neat, with glossy evergreen leaves that always look freshly polished. Perfect size for a patio pot or a small garden corner. Ours here is slow and steady, but it always looks like it got groomed this morning.
  • 🟡And the fruit… that’s where the fun begins. Tiny yellow-orange globes, golf-ball size, glowing against the green leaves. Inside is that clear, juicy pulp, and when you taste it, you understand the name instantly. Sweet and tart at the same time, like someone turned a lemon drop candy into a tropical fruit.
  • 🟡People snack on them right off the tree, but they’re also great in juices and little dessert experiments. It’s one of those fruits that makes you feel like you grew something exotic without needing a jungle-sized space or complicated care. Give it sun, give it water, keep it in a nice pot, and it’s perfectly happy.
  • 🟡A cute, flavorful, collector-worthy tree that fits right into small spaces.


🛒 Plant Lemon Candy Tree - Lemon Drop Mangosteen

📚 Learn more:
Does it really taste like Lemon drops?

#Food_Forest #Container_Garden #Fun_facts

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The giant star shaped bloom you wont believe is real. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

The giant star shaped bloom you wont believe is real

⭐️ The giant star shaped bloom you wont believe is real

  • ⭐️ Stapelia gigantea, the Starfish Flower, is one of those plants you notice from across the yard and immediately walk over to investigate. The blooms are huge - often close to a foot across - and look exactly like soft, fuzzy starfish dropped right onto the plant. Pale yellow petals with fine maroon lines give it that wild, otherworldly look.

  • ⭐️ Yes, it has a scent - just enough to fool flies, which is exactly what the plant wants. They’re the pollinators, and this flower knows how to get their attention. For us humans, the real show is the size, shape, and texture. It’s a living prop straight out of a sci-fi movie.

  • ⭐️ Even without flowers, the plant itself looks cool: thick, 4-angled succulent stems that sprawl and stack into a low, sculptural mound. In the ground it can spread a couple feet wide, and in a pot it becomes the ultimate conversation piece. And despite looking like a cactus, it’s actually in the Milkweed family. When it’s happy and sets seed, the pods open to release silky little parachutes floating away on the breeze.

  • ⭐️ Strange, bold, and absolutely unforgettable - this is one plant nobody walks past without asking about it.


🛒 Get your own Zulu plant

📱

YouTube short videos:
📚 Learn more:
Stapelia gigantea in Plant Encyclopedia

#Nature_Wonders #Container_Garden
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It opens overnight, wakes up just for Thanksgiving! A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

It opens overnight, wakes up just for Thanksgiving!

Gloxinia sylvatica - Bolivian Sunset

🔥 It opens overnight, wakes up just for Thanksgiving!
  • 🔥 Gloxinia sylvatica - Bolivian Sunset, is one of those plants that waits for the perfect cool morning and then explodes in red.
  • 🔥 The blooms really do show up overnight - bright fire-red, glowing even in deep shade. and blooms all through fall and winter. In Summer it sleeps, then flowers come back in Fall.
  • 🔥 It's an easy, water-loving, shade-loving plant that makes a showy holiday ground cover. It stays low, spreads from rhizomes. And if you like sharing plants, this one gives you plenty of starts to pass around during the holidays. Perfect timing, perfect color, perfect seasonal surprise!


🛒 Plant Bolivian Sunset - the Winter Wonder that turns on like a light switch!

📚 Learn more:
Low growing show stopper blooms like a winter fire

#Butterfly_Plants #Container_Garden #Shade_Garden

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An heirloom holiday cactus lost for decades: Thanksgiving-to-Easter bloomer. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

An heirloom holiday cactus lost for decades: Thanksgiving-to-Easter bloomer

Schlumbergera x New Deal

Schlumbergera x New Deal

🌸 An heirloom holiday cactus lost for decades: Thanksgiving-to-Easter bloomer
  • 🌸 Schlumbergera x New Deal is not your regular Christmas cactus. This is a true heirloom, a variety that vanished from the trade for decades and originally appeared at a rare plant sale at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden back on November 8, 1932 - the same day F.D.R. won the presidency and launched the famous New Deal. The name stuck, and so did the plant’s reputation!
  • 🌸 What makes New Deal special? First, the flowers. They are big - about an inch larger than standard holiday cactus blooms – and show up in brilliant violet-pink and white. Second, this variety blooms twice a year, which is why people call it a Thanksgiving-to-Easter cactus. It usually opens a full flush around Thanksgiving and Christmas, then surprises you with a second wave toward spring.
  • 🌸 Despite its pedigree, New Deal is easy to grow. It handles normal houseplant conditions, stays compact, and rewards even casual care with heavy blooming.
  • 🌸 The plants available today come from 3rd-generation cuttings of an original specimen that's still alive, making this one of the rarest and most authentic holiday cactus cultivars you can add to your collection. A living piece of history - and one of the most generous bloomers for the holiday season!


🛒 Get your own vintage Christmas cactus with a history

#Container_Garden #Shade_Garden #Nature_Wonders

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