Garden Blog - Top Tropicals
Cassia vs Bauhinia: which is better as an everblooming container tree?
Cassia vs Bauhinia: which is better as an everblooming container tree?
🌈 Cassia vs Bauhinia: which is better as an everblooming container tree?
🛒 Explore Cassia trees and Bauhinias (Orchid Trees)
📚 Learn more:
#Container_Garden #Trees #How_to
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- 🌸 Cassia (Senna) trees are very popular flowering trees - fast growing, free-flowering, relatively cold hardy, and they love the summer heat. Cassias come in several colors: yellow, orange, pink, red, and rainbow. Rainbow varieties (which are hybrids between yellow and pink cassias) are the most popular thanks to their multicolor blooms with swirls of yellow, pink, red, and orange. But while Rainbow Cassia is a spectacular flowering tree for southern gardens, is it a good choice for a container when you want color on your patio or pool deck?
- 🌸 Some yellow-flowering cassias make attractive bushes that bloom most of the year and stay compact, so they can be grown as container specimens:
- 🌸 When it comes to Rainbow or pink cassias such as Cassia javanica - Apple Blossom Tree or Cassia grandis- Red Cassia and other species and hybrids (Cassia marginata - Rainbow Shower Tree, Cassia roxburghii - Ceylon Senna, Cassia x nodosa - Pink Shower), these are usually more vigorous trees that may take several years to bloom. Their flowering season lasts from a few weeks to a couple of months. These trees grow moderately fast but typically need to reach about 10 feet before they start flowering.
- 🌸 So, the answer is: if you want rich, deep color year-round from a container tree, go with Bauhinias - Orchid Trees. Most varieties grow well in pots, stay compact, and reach blooming maturity within just one season. The following varieties are everblooming and can produce flowers for up to 10 months of the year:
Cassia didymobotrya- Popcorn Cassia
Senna alata - Empress Candles
Cassia fistula - Golden Shower (a compact size winter blooming tree)
- ▫️Bauhinia madagascariensis - Red Dwarf Orchid Tree. Blooms from winter through fall, up to 10 months a year. The most cold-hardy of all.
- ▫️Bauhinia blakeana - Hong Kong Orchid Tree. A large tree in the ground, but compact in pots if trimmed. Grafted trees flower right away. Winter bloomer, cold hardy to light frost.
- ▫️Bauhinia tomentosa - Yellow Orchid Tree. Flowers from Winter through Summer, cold hardy to light frost.
- ▫️Bauhiniamonandra - Napoleon's Plume Orchid Tree. Almost everblooming with the longest flowering period (less cold hardy than the first three).
- ▫️Bauhinia acuminata - Dwarf White Orchid Tree. Blooms from summer through winter (also less cold hardy than the first three).
🛒 Explore Cassia trees and Bauhinias (Orchid Trees)
📚 Learn more:
- ✦ How to add color to your yard with Cassias
- ✦ Rainbow Cassias and Why they are called "Rainbow"
- ✦ Napoleons Plume - Orchid Tree that blooms in a pot
- ✦ Bauhinia madagascariensis, or Red Butterfly Orchid Tree that NEVER Stops Blooming
- ✦ Rare Red Orchid Tree you may never find again but everyone wants
- ✦ Bauhinia acuminata, Dwarf Orchid tree - white and elegant
- ✦ 5 small tropical trees that bloom all summer or year around
- ✦ How to grow Orchid Trees in pots
#Container_Garden #Trees #How_to
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11 tropical fruits to eat instead of taking a fiber supplement
🍑 11 tropical fruits to eat instead of taking a fiber supplement
These fruits aren’t just delicious - they help you meet your daily fiber needs in ways that are far more enjoyable (and sustainable) than taking supplements. And when home gardeners, farmers, or tropical communities grow and share them, it’s a double win: nutrition and tradition hand in hand.
✔️ Tropical fiber power: tips for getting more fiber from tropical fruits
🛒 Plant a fruit tree to harvest your fruit tomorrow
📚 Learn more:
Tropical fruit health benefits guide - what fruit and edibles can help with health issues and vitamin deficiencies, Part 1 and Part 2.
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover #How_to
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- When we think of tropical fruit, we picture sweetness, sunshine, and exotic flavors packed with vitamin C. But beneath all that juicy goodness lies another gift: dietary fiber - quietly working to support digestion, feed the gut microbiome, and help keep blood sugar steady.
- Avocado leads the pack among tropical fruits for fiber content. One creamy, ripe fruit can provide around 10 grams of fiber, roughly a third of an adult’s daily need. And there’s more to avocado than fiber - it’s also rich in healthy fats, micronutrients, and that silky texture everyone loves.
- Other tropical fruits bring their own kind of fiber strength. Guava delivers up to 9 grams per cup, plus a burst of vitamin C.
- Mango offers about 3 grams in half a fruit, especially when eaten with some of the skin.
- Pineapple, though not always seen as a fiber powerhouse, still contributes around 2 grams per cup, along with bromelain, the enzyme that helps digestion.
- Jackfruit’s fibrous pulp makes it another standout - it’s so meaty, it’s even used as a plant-based substitute in savory dishes.
- Sapote fruit (Mamey, Canistel) and Sapodilla add fiber with a smooth, custard-like texture.
- Adventurous tropical varieties like Annona (custard apple, soursop) may not top the charts in fiber numbers, but their soft, fibrous flesh still adds value: about 1.3 grams of fiber per 100 grams of fruit.
- Bananas contain both soluble and insoluble fiber; the soluble part (mainly pectin) helps control blood sugar and appetite, while the insoluble fiber aids regularity.
- Mulberries are rich in insoluble fiber, especially in their skin, supporting digestion and promoting healthy bowel movements.
- Dragon fruit offers a mix of soluble fiber in its juicy flesh and insoluble fiber from its tiny edible seeds, which help support gut health and feed good bacteria.
These fruits aren’t just delicious - they help you meet your daily fiber needs in ways that are far more enjoyable (and sustainable) than taking supplements. And when home gardeners, farmers, or tropical communities grow and share them, it’s a double win: nutrition and tradition hand in hand.
✔️ Tropical fiber power: tips for getting more fiber from tropical fruits
- ⏺Eat whole, not juiced. Most of the fiber is in the pulp, skin, and seeds. Juicing removes much of that goodness.
- ⏺Mix it up. Tropical fruits are great, but balance them with legumes, whole grains, nuts, and veggies for a full fiber range.
- ⏺Take it slow. If your diet is low in fiber, increase gradually to avoid bloating or discomfort.
- ⏺Drink plenty of water. Fiber works best when paired with hydration.
- ⏺Mind the ripeness. Unripe fruits can have more resistant starch, another form of fiber.
- ⏺Get creative. Toss tropical fruits into smoothies, salsas, breakfast bowls, or even desserts - a tasty stealth-fiber strategy.
🛒 Plant a fruit tree to harvest your fruit tomorrow
📚 Learn more:
Tropical fruit health benefits guide - what fruit and edibles can help with health issues and vitamin deficiencies, Part 1 and Part 2.
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover #How_to
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Avocado leaf tea: island secret for a calm heart and blood pressure
Avocado leaf tea: island secret for a calm heart and blood pressure
🛒 Plant an Avocado tree and help your body stay healthy
📚 Learn more:
Tropical fruit and plants that help keep blood pressure in balance, Part 1, and Part 2.
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover #How_to
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🍃 You see that Avocado tree in your yard? Don't just love it for the fruit - the leaves carry magic too! Old folks in the tropics will tell you - never throw away the avocado leaves. They’ve been used for generations to brew a tea that helps steady the heart and ease high blood pressure.
🍃 When life gets busy and your heart starts beating too fast, this tea helps it find its rhythm again. The leaf holds flavonoids and quercetin - fancy words for what nature been doing all along: keeping the blood flowing smooth and the body at peace. Folks say it also helps with digestion and keeps the liver happy.
🍃 Avocado leaf tea
Ingredients
- 3 to 4 fresh avocado leaves
- 2 cups water
- Optional: honey, lemon, or cinnamon stick
Instructions
- Rinse the avocado leaves well.
- Place them in a small pot with 2 cups of water.
- Bring to a gentle simmer and let it cook for about 10 minutes.
- Strain the tea and add honey, lemon, or cinnamon if desired.
- Sip slowly and enjoy the calm, earthy flavor.
- 🍃 They say it helps the belly, calms the mind, and keeps the liver strong. Maybe that’s science, maybe it’s just island truth - but it surely does the body good! Some call it bush medicine, others just call it good sense. Either way, it’s a simple garden remedy that’s been soothing hearts long before pills and prescriptions came around.
🛒 Plant an Avocado tree and help your body stay healthy
📚 Learn more:
Tropical fruit and plants that help keep blood pressure in balance, Part 1, and Part 2.
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover #How_to
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Stop watering your Monstera on a schedule - here is what it really wants!
💦Stop watering your Monstera on a schedule - here is what it really wants!
📸 In the photo: Rhaphidophora tetrasperma - Mini Monstera, Dwarf Monstera Ginny, a rare collectible for plant enthusiasts.
🛒 Shop Monstera plants
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#Food_Forest #Container_Garden #Shade_Garden #How_to
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☘️ Monstera might look like a big diva, but it's actually one of the easiest houseplants to keep happy, according to the gardening experts from Southern Living.
☘️ The trick is not sticking to a strict watering schedule, but checking the soil. Water only when the top couple inches feel dry - usually every week or two in warm months and less in winter. Give it a good soak until water drains out the bottom, then let it dry again.
☘️ Too much water is worse than too little – soggy soil means root rot. Signs of overwatering include yellow or droopy leaves, dark spots, or gnats buzzing around. Underwatering looks similar, but the soil will be bone dry. When in doubt, check the dirt!
☘️ You can water from the top or let the pot sit in a shallow tray to soak from the bottom – just don’t let it sit in water. Bright, indirect light and a well-draining pot are your best friends. Keep that balance, and your Monstera will thrive for decades.
📸 In the photo: Rhaphidophora tetrasperma - Mini Monstera, Dwarf Monstera Ginny, a rare collectible for plant enthusiasts.
🛒 Shop Monstera plants
📚 Learn more:
- • Fruit growing on a house plant!
- • How to harvest and eat Monstera Ice Cream
- • How mini is Mini Monstera?
- • Holy Swiss Cheese Plant
- • Monstera x adansonii - Baby Swiss Cheese Plant
#Food_Forest #Container_Garden #Shade_Garden #How_to
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Yes, you can grow a tropical fruit tree in a pot!
Yes, you can grow a tropical fruit tree in a pot!
If you live where winters get chilly, move the pot indoors or into a greenhouse before frost. Prune lightly in spring to keep shape and airflow. Container trees can fruit heavily if given light, warmth, and consistent care.
At the end of the day, container culture lets you grow the tropics anywhere - from a city balcony to a backyard deck.
➡ Next: The best tropical fruit trees for containers...
📸 Growing and fruiting Soursop in apartment (PDF download)
🛒 Explore tropical fruit trees
#Food_Forest #How_to #Discover
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🍒 If you dream of picking fresh tropical fruit - Mango, Avocado, exotiс Annona and more - but only have a patio, balcony, or small yard, you’re not out of luck. Many tropical fruit trees grow perfectly well in large containers. The key is choosing the right variety, pot, and care routine.
🍒 Pick a compact tree type
🍒 Choose the right pot
🍒 Soil and watering
🍒 Light and feeding
🍒 Cold protection and pruning
Start with a dwarf or semi-dwarf variety. Regular tropical trees can grow huge, but container-sized cultivars stay under 8–10 feet and are much easier to manage. For example, Condo varieties of Mango like Pickering or Ice Cream stay small and still produce full-sized fruit. The same goes for Dwarf Avocados like Wurtz (also called Little Cado) and Sugar apples. Blackberry Jam fruit tree (Randia formosa) and Peanut Butter Fruit tree (Bunchosia argentea) are also excellent choices.
Begin with a 5-gallon container and move up as the tree grows. A mature plant will be happy in a 20–25-gallon pot. Drainage is critical - roots will rot if the pot stays soggy. Use a sturdy plastic, ceramic, or wooden container with multiple holes in the bottom.
These trees all like loose, well-draining soil. Mix potting soil with perlite or pine bark for better aeration. Water deeply but not too often - let the top few inches dry before watering again. Overwatering is the quickest way to kill a potted tropical.
Full sun is a must - aim for at least 6 hours daily. Fertilize during the growing season with a balanced fruit tree or slow-release fertilizer like Green Magic or liquid Sunshine Boosters. Many tropicals appreciate an extra boost of micronutrients like iron and magnesium to keep their leaves green.
If you live where winters get chilly, move the pot indoors or into a greenhouse before frost. Prune lightly in spring to keep shape and airflow. Container trees can fruit heavily if given light, warmth, and consistent care.
At the end of the day, container culture lets you grow the tropics anywhere - from a city balcony to a backyard deck.
➡ Next: The best tropical fruit trees for containers...
📸 Growing and fruiting Soursop in apartment (PDF download)
🛒 Explore tropical fruit trees
#Food_Forest #How_to #Discover
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Plant for birds: feast for wildlife and people from a tiny vine!
Passiflora suberosa - Corkystem Passion Vine
Plant for birds: feast for wildlife and people from a tiny vine!
🛒 Plant this small and tough vine with food and wildlife benefits
📚 Learn more:
#Food_Forest #Hedges_with_benefits #Butterfly_Plants #How_to
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- Passiflora suberosa - Corkystem Passion Flower: did you know this Florida native passion vine is more than just a butterfly host? Birds love it too - they’ll happily snack on the little fruits and sing you thank-you songs all day long!
- And yes, the fruit is edible for people as well! The berries are small, but they make a fun and exotic treat.
- The plants has a tiny flower and a tiny fruit – both only about half an inch – but together they create a mighty native habitat.
- It's a triple win: butterflies, birds, and people can all enjoy something from this charming little plant. Plus, it’s the larval host for Gulf Fritillary, Zebra Longwing, and Julia butterflies, and its tiny greenish flowers provide nectar all year long. Fast-growing, easy, and full of life – a real gem for any Florida garden.
- This vine is delicate and compact, perfect for a medium trellis or climbing a small tree. Unlike the big, aggressive passion vines that can cover a whole fence, this one stays manageable.
- This Passion vine is not just charming and wildlife-friendly, it’s also tough as nails. Cold hardy and easy to grow, this native vine takes whatever Florida throws at it – heavy rains, long droughts and heat, poor sandy soils, even total neglect – and still thrives. A perfect choice if you want beauty, wildlife, and resilience all in one little plant.
🛒 Plant this small and tough vine with food and wildlife benefits
📚 Learn more:
- ✦ What is the sweetest Passionfruit?
- ✦ How big is Giant Granadilla?
- ✦ Does Red Passion flower produce edible fruit?
- ✦ The truth about Passion flower and Passion fruit
- ✦ Top 20 plants for a Butterfly Haven
- ✦ Top Eight irresistible vines for a hummingbird haven
#Food_Forest #Hedges_with_benefits #Butterfly_Plants #How_to
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How do we ship plants?
James Coconuts managing Shipping Department at TopTropicals
Plants packed in boxes and ready to go
Plant packing conveyer
Mittens is a new Shipping hire
🚚 How do we ship plants?
🚚 How do we ship plants?
📦 More pictures of packing plants for the previous videos:
📸 In the pictures:
🛒 Shop plants online
📚 Learn more:
#How_to
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🚚 How do we ship plants?
📦 More pictures of packing plants for the previous videos:
- ▫️How do we ship plants? Part 1: prepare the plant
- ▫️How do we ship plants? Part 2: packing in the box
- ▫️How do we ship plants, Part 3: it's Christmas - unwrapping is fun?
📸 In the pictures:
- · James Coconuts managing Shipping Department at TopTropicals
- · Plants packed in boxes and ready to go
- · Plant packing conveyer
- · Mittens is a new Shipping hire
🛒 Shop plants online
📚 Learn more:
#How_to
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How do we ship plants, Part 3: its Christmas - unwrapping is fun?
How do we ship plants, Part 3: it's Christmas - unwrapping is fun?
🚚 How do we ship plants, Part 3: it's Christmas - unwrapping is fun?
How to take care of your mail order plant (potted plant)
When your plant arrives, carefully remove it from the box and water it right away.
🌴 How to plant your mail order plant in the ground
🎥 Part 3 shows you how to unpack a plant. Happy Gardening!
🛒 Shop plants online
📚 Learn more:
#How_to
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- 📦 In the previous videos (Part 1: prepare the plant and Part 2: packing in the box), we showed you how we ship the plant to you.
- 📦 Every order comes with planting instructions. Read them first!
You received the package - what is next?
How to take care of your mail order plant (potted plant)
When your plant arrives, carefully remove it from the box and water it right away.
- ▫️Place it in bright light but out of direct sun for the first few days so it can recover from shipping.
- ▫️Keep the soil evenly moist, not soggy.
- ▫️After about a week, gradually introduce it to more sun or move it to its permanent spot.
- ▫️Read detailed instructions.
🌴 How to plant your mail order plant in the ground
- ▫️Don't put a new plant straight from the box into the ground!
- ▫️First, pot it up and let it recover and grow strong for a few weeks.
- ▫️Once it's well established, choose a sunny, well-drained spot outdoors.
- ▫️Dig a hole twice as wide as the pot, place the plant at the same depth, and backfill with good, rich soil.
- ▫️Water thoroughly to settle the roots and add mulch around the base, keeping it away from the stem.
- ▫️Keep watering regularly until the plant takes off.
- ▫️Read detailed instructions.
🎥 Part 3 shows you how to unpack a plant. Happy Gardening!
🛒 Shop plants online
📚 Learn more:
- ▫️Shipping information page
- ▫️Planting instructions
- ▫️How do we ship plants? Part 1: prepare the plant
- ▫️How do we ship plants? Part 2: packing in the box
#How_to
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10-minute recipe Bo La Lot with a leaf youve never cooked before!
Bo La Lot recipe with Vietnamese pepper Lalot (Piper sarmentosum)
🍴 10-minute recipe Bo La Lot with a leaf you’ve never cooked before!
🌯 BO LA LOT RECIPE
✔️ Ingredients
🛒 Grow Leaf Pappers for tasty, peppery recipes
📚 Learn more:
📱 Growing Lalot Pepper
#Food_Forest #Recipes #Container_Garden #How_to
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- 🌮 Forget boring tacos - this wrap will blow your mind! In Vietnam they call it Bo La Lot - beef wrapped in peppery Lalot leaves.
- 🌮 It started as grape leaf wraps in the Middle East, but in tropical Asia grapes don’t grow, so people swapped to Lalot. Way more flavor than grape leaves!
- 🌮 Grilled beef, garlic, onion, lemongrass - all can be tucked into these shiny green leaves. Smoky, juicy, and so good you’ll wonder why you didn't try it sooner! It's better than grape leaf wraps, because it has so much flavor!
- 🌮 Most large leaf pepper plants will work for this recipe - Vietnamese pepper Lalot (Piper sarmentosum), Betel Leaf (Piper betle), or even large leaves of the traditional Black Pepper plant (Piper nigrum).
🌯 BO LA LOT RECIPE
✔️ Ingredients
- · 1 pound ground beef or turkey
- · 2 tablespoons chopped lemongrass (optional)
- · 1 tbsp spice powder
- · 1 tbsp curry powder
- · 1 tbsp finely minced garlic
- · 1 tbsp oyster sauce or fish sauce (optional)
- · 1 tsp ground black pepper
- · 1 tbsp finely minced shallots
- · 1 tbsp soy sauce
- · 2 tsp sugar or honey
- · 1/2 tbsp olive oil
- · 1/2 tbsp salt
- · 10-15 fresh Lalot leaves
- 👉 Directions
- · Preheat the grill.
- · Combine all ingredients in a large mixing bowl and mix well.
- · Wrap about 2 tablespoons of the mixture into each betel leaf.
- · Spear 3 to 4 betel leaf wraps onto a skewer and grill until the meat is thoroughly cooked.
- · Be sure to eat immediately.
🛒 Grow Leaf Pappers for tasty, peppery recipes
📚 Learn more:
- ▫️Lalot beef wraps: Quick-n-Fun exotic recipes
- ▫️Vietnamese Pepper - Lalot food wraps BBQ recipe
- ▫️How to grow your own Pepper plants. Five most valuable Pipers
- ▫️How to to get Pepper leaves large and green
📱 Growing Lalot Pepper
#Food_Forest #Recipes #Container_Garden #How_to
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How do we ship plants? Part 2: packing in the box
How do we ship plants? Part 2: packing in the box.
🚚 How do we ship plants? Part 2: packing in the box.
🎥 Part 2 shows you how to pack a plant.
❗️Stay tuned - the final step is coming in Part 3!
🛒 Shop plants online
📚 Learn more:
Shipping information page
#How_to
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
- 📦 In the previous video (Part 1: prepare the plant), we showed you how to prepare a plant for shipping.
- 📦 We’ll show you how to place the plant in the box, keep it snug and secure, and make sure i'’s ready for a safe trip from our nursery to your door.
- 📦 Watch out for shipping confirmation email to avoid your package sitting on a hot porch or freezing doorstep.
Now comes the most important step - boxing it up!
🎥 Part 2 shows you how to pack a plant.
❗️Stay tuned - the final step is coming in Part 3!
🛒 Shop plants online
📚 Learn more:
Shipping information page
#How_to
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals





