I love looking at tropical gardens for inspiration and planting my garden with beautiful tropical plants and truly your garden is an inspiration to me. I loved .
Yes they are easy to grow and wonderful red leafs. Love the Spindle palms but my favourite is the Adonidia. Might try a Majesty palm.. I am growing the Dypsis Pembana.
Loved the garden tour! Everything has grown so much and filled up your containers. Like the potato vine , very nice and lush green! Your pool is so beautiful too , and should be really nice swimming there! Thanks for sharing.
Wow, I remember when you pinched the head off that coleus when you planted it on your porch, to encourage it to spread. Look at it now! It's a monster. Everything's looking so beautiful! My garden is looking so sad... although I can't complain. Aussie winter is so mild that everything thinks it's already spring and the buds are already coming. I've been wondering how your vanilla bean orchid is going... I watched the vid where you staked it to the coconut husk. Be great to see an update on that! - Catherine 🌴🌺🌿
Hi Catherine! Yes the coleus grew like insanity! The vanilla is doing well, because it is variegated, i still havent moved it into enough light, i'm so scared it wil scorch and burn! lol
Your garden is beautiful!! I just have one question. Are you crazy? ;) Just kidding! Seriously though. The sun impatiens are absolutely stunning! That is one of my favorite garden colors. The oranges, fuchsia pinks, deep reds. I'm a sucker for anything with those colors. :D I've never really been a fan of impatiens, but now that I know that variety exists? You can bet the hunt is on starting tomorrow. I'm hoping I can find them here in Florida. I don't recall ever seeing them here. I'm also going to look for the Persian Shields. They will add some "new" color to my pool deck. Thanks for sharing! Looking forward to future videos.
HAHA! Crazy or delusional may be a way to describe it! It has always been important for my backyard, which is my getaway/safehaven to feel like it is somewhere other than my everyday surroundings, so i like the tropical esthetic over just boxwoods, day lilies and knock out roses like all the landscapes around here. Don't get me wrong, i love all of those plants, especially the lilies and roses, but i keep those in the more formal front yard landscape. lol, impatiens are pretty great, they are are easy, cheap and floriferous! I like you taste in colors! i know, at least in central florida the care for the sunimpatiens is a little different because they can keep on growing year-round, i think they just need to be cut back every six months or so to keep them going. Oh, sunimpatiens with persian shield is right up my alley, that will be stunning!
Tropical Plant Party I got both the sun impatiens and the persian shield! So excited! The impatiens I found (at Ace Hardware) are very stalky so I've trimmed them back a bit so they will (hopefully) fill out instead of straight up. Attempting to grow more from some of the cuttings as well. We'll see. I haven't had much luck in the past when dealing with cuttings. Oh and had 2 hummingbirds at my firecracker plant today! So exciting!!
Very nice Jeff, I really like,well, all of the garden. What sticks out for me, is what is the variety of Impatiens out front? How much sun do they get? I think you had said they are on drip irrigation? I would like to try those in the front of my large Alocasia pots in the front of my house next year. I get a nice E/SE morning sun and then a hit of late afternoon sun briefly. Yours are absolutely gorgeous. I just wanted to put a plug in for a video on the Orchids. I have recently started to bring some into the house/summer outside garden and have so many questions. I have picked up (very cheaply i must say thanks to the Floral lady in the store where I work) mostly Phalaenopsis, but three very nice and different varieties of Cymbidium. This is the first year for most. I had picked up one of the Cymbidium last summer( sadly did not bloom this year), and I need to divide the three of those this summer. Anywho, I would look forward to a video on the general care,do's don'ts etc.. on orchid care. The Garden looks great, I wish we had as long of a growing season as You, but hey....we have colder Winters so we win right? Sure Pal... Kevin
hi kevin! Sorry it took me so long to respond, this comment for some reason was in the spam section... youtube isn't very smart. There are 2 types of impatiens out front, the variegated ones are the sunpatiens variegated tropical rose and orange, while all of the others are the standard elfin mix impatiens. The sunpatiens are the ones along the driveway. I think having them around your alocasia would look wonderful! As far as the orchids go, sounds like you are gaining quite the variety! Cymbidiums have different variations on heat tolerance and bloom time, however standard cymbs like a lot of sun and cool evening temps(when soil is dry) in the fall, this is a big part of what encourages their blooms. Phals are not as particular but cooler night temps and warm day temps seem to spring them into spike just fine. Mine kind of just bloom throughout the year seemingly whenever they want to. I'm still on the fence with getting back into orchid videos, other than just tours and updates, but a basic care guide might be fun and good suggestion that i'm considering. Again, im so sorry it took me so long to get back to you!
I love love love your garden!!!!!! It reminds me of the yards, natural surroundings and the Garden’s I saw when growing up a short while in Ft. Myers, Florida (Gulf Coast, basically middle of the state but on the west side, not far from Tampa or Orlando) being so close to the ocean the tropical flowers and fruits we would be lucky to have in our neighborhood was like going on a treasure hunt! So a few of my questions would be, do you start over each year with the perennial or house plant pieces you use in the yard as well as under potting for the palms? I know you have a company pick up the palms to store over winter for you, I didn’t see any smaller flowers go with them.. So how do you keep them alive? I am in a zone 6/5 and would love to get another hibiscus, had one for around 5 years I would just bring in for the winter but it was always something as far as spider mites or something else fighting me to keep it alive so any help would be amazing, you obviously know what you are doing!! Again thank you as always for taking the time to share your beautiful and amazing space! So far this year all the efforts have really paid off and I look forward to continue seeing the updates through the season ✌🏼💚🌺🌿🤗
Hi Jasmine! Thank you for all of your kind words! Ft. Meyers is stunning, I have only driven through on my way to North Captiva a few times, but its just gorgeous! The plants planted under the palms that are stored are not guaranteed by the greenhouse people, so it's just a roll of the dice if they make it, usually they don't and i have to start over, which sucks! I am actually sitting looking at my Alexander palm right now deciding what to plant under it, and i think im just going with the cheapest clearance annuals I have laying around, for that exact reason... but who knows what i'll do. For the Hibiscus... They can definitely be troublesome sometimes indoors. If the only issue is critters showing up on them in the winter time, then i would suggest giving the plant a systemic insecticide monthly, or per the directions on the bottle far before first frost hits, so maybe 8 weeks before you bring it inside. The systemics works best when the plants are actively growing, so its good to start early with them when it is warm out. Then a few weeks after (not at the same time) apply a foliar/topical insecticide with enough of a window that you can give it 2 treatments before bringing it inside. Once it is indoors keep a bottle of horticultural oil nifty, neem oil, and apply it to the tops and bottoms of the leaves every few weeks. Oh and if you have pets or children that might ingest any of the plant, then disregard everything i said about the insecticides! If the problem is specifically spider mites, keep the plant where there is good air circulation around it and try to give it some humidity, spider mites hate wet air a moving air. You can do this by keeping a fan near the plant and aiming it so the air moves around, or passed the plant, but not directly on it. For humidity people use pebble trays, humidifiers, and really just giving the foliage a good spray of water daily helps as well. If you are more natural with your plants than a adding some peppermint oil to a spray bottle with water works very well also. There are a lot of ways to treat naturally actually, dish soap, rubbing alcohol etc... depends on what the bugs are. So the best advice i can give is to be proactive and start treating before the plants come in and don't forget to fertilize regularly to keep the plant nice and healthy to survive any insects that may show up. Hibiscus in particular like a lot of potassium, which many fertilizers lack copious amounts of. Potassium strengthens cell walls and can help create a sturdier hibiscus. There are fertilizers available online specifically for hibiscus, or you can just use a regular all-purpose and add some molasses, maybe a tablespoon to a gallon of water, its hard to dissolve it, i usually just blend it up into molasses chunks in the water. lol. I know this was long winded but wanted to cover all the bases. Hope this was helpful!
Super gorgeous garden and such a fun enthusiastic gardener and plantsman.You know we are all coming over ,I will bring the rum,Eldorado of course,Cuba Libre anyone.
Yes, great idea, planting your succulents in the pot you have already. Your banana trees look great, my mother has one banana tree and it doesn’t look as great as your. Do you fertilize the trees frequently?
Typically i give them a high nitrogen continuous release fertilizer after they put out their second or third leaves, then i fertilize with a liquid weekly or bi-weekly after... but i've been bad this year and haven't given a liquid yet. :/
Love all your plants! At 9:47 what is that variegated plant sounds like you say Rhodia but I tried a search with that name and came up empty. One mysteriously showed up at our place (We grow annuals, vegetables, perennials, but no tropicals like you have) I snapped it up. It was in a tiny pot with no identification on it. It looks like it will be very similar to what you have there. I do believe you've got me hooked on tropicals though much to my husband's chagrin!
Hi Cheryl! Those are Rhoeos! I love them, and actually have a video on them that should be out by thursday. :)Haha! I'm glad you've got the bug now for tropicals!
Also, your cactus garden is absolutely gorgeous! Queen palms are one of my favs, however, they tend to grow very large pods, and when they open, they spew green balls every where, and I mean every where, lol! They're a pain in the --- ! If you were in Northern California, I'd hire you in a hot second! Lol - 😎🌴🌵
Thank you! That is quite the compliment! Yes i have heard they are very messy palms, luckily the growing season here is too short for them to go into flower, so i haven't had to worry about that.
Beautiful of course, but quick question please! What zone are you at, may I know? Where did you find such a gorgeous garden hose?????? I love the bright color!!!!
Hi Tropical, what part of the country do you live in? With 11° below zero, your plants survived really well. I assumed you lived in zone 10 somewhere in Florida. Thanks for the video.
Hello! I am right in the middle, St. Louis, i live on the border of zones 6a/6b. I am particularly the gingers survived! I lost one clump of them, but that was a more tropical variety that i had been surprised was coming back in previous years to begin with. They are smaller than ever, but with enough tlc they should get back to normal soon enough! i wish i was in zone 10!
Wonderful garden. Have you considered a Papaya tree? Where are you located? I was confused when you said the temperature got down to -11, yet your Coconut tree survived.
Lebene thank you so much! Unfortunately those were just sold as assorted Alocasias. I don't know the specific name of the variety with any certainty. I'm sorry!
Wow everything looks great! Do you bring in your anthuriums in for winter and if so do you have to deal with bugs? Your pool is so pretty, Btw I love orange and pink together!
Haha, I love orange and pink together also, but these hydrangeas have very pale pink flowers, i'm just unsure if the extreme difference in shades will be distracting, but i love loud colors and i love those sun impatiens so i'm actually ok with it. I do bring the anthuriums inside during winter, bugs haven't been a major problem with them so far.
Thank you so much! I don't think i'm going to cut them, even if they are choking out the petunias, i kind of just want to let them go and see how big they get! ... as long as they become a tripping hazard, which they very well may... i'll just watch my step or wear a helmet. HAHA!
Do you allow yours to go fully dormant? I have started to keep the plant potted up in a pot just large enough to get it in the house. Then cut each stalk just above where the next leaf will emerge, and let it sit for the winter inside. Usually around the end of February, the leaves will start to emerge from those stalks.Then I start to water. This has given me a much larger plant, earlier in zone 4. Kevin
Que jardim lindo!! Ola passando para conhecer o canal e adorei gosto mt desse tipo de conteúdo, se puder venha me fazer uma visitinha, e ver minha colheita de morangos bjs
thank you, Manuel! No favorite, too many to pick from, although, there is a variety called, Alabama Sunset that gets hot pink stems with the right sun and soil ph... I do really like that one!
@@TropicalPlantParty I live in Arizona. I want to grow a food forest and garden on my 10 acres in Tonopah. It gets cold here in the winter for tropical plants such as Mangos but I have not given up even though I lost all three mango trees last winter. I am working on growing my microclimate and then I will try again with the mangos and bananas and other tropical plants.
In love with your garden.Awesome😊
thank you, nathan!
I love looking at tropical gardens for inspiration and planting my garden with beautiful tropical plants and truly your garden is an inspiration to me. I loved .
Well thank you!
Yes they are easy to grow and wonderful red leafs. Love the Spindle palms but my favourite is the Adonidia. Might try a Majesty palm.. I am growing the Dypsis Pembana.
Loved the garden tour! Everything has grown so much and filled up your containers. Like the potato vine , very nice and lush green! Your pool is so beautiful too , and should be really nice swimming there! Thanks for sharing.
Thank you, Mary! I really love the potato vines, even if they are choking out the supertunias! lol
I love you garden. Beautiful
Nice garden! Beautiful flowers & love the succulents. Hope u eat those sweet potatoes vine when u cut it down, it’s a very healthy veggies.😊👍
Wow, I remember when you pinched the head off that coleus when you planted it on your porch, to encourage it to spread. Look at it now! It's a monster. Everything's looking so beautiful! My garden is looking so sad... although I can't complain. Aussie winter is so mild that everything thinks it's already spring and the buds are already coming.
I've been wondering how your vanilla bean orchid is going... I watched the vid where you staked it to the coconut husk. Be great to see an update on that!
- Catherine 🌴🌺🌿
Hi Catherine! Yes the coleus grew like insanity! The vanilla is doing well, because it is variegated, i still havent moved it into enough light, i'm so scared it wil scorch and burn! lol
Your design plan worked out great! Very colorful. Really like the potato vines, nice an full!
thank you! Those potato vines are really loving the heat this year!
You are crazy.... in a good way. Love your presentation and the garden. Cool!
🤣😂 well thank you!
Your front yard and pool area look beautiful. Love watching your videos.
Thank you so much, Sue!
Your front entrance Impatiens were so inspiring I planted the same and had a huge success. I plan to expand it more in 2021
Your garden is beautiful!! I just have one question. Are you crazy? ;) Just kidding!
Seriously though. The sun impatiens are absolutely stunning! That is one of my favorite garden colors. The oranges, fuchsia pinks, deep reds. I'm a sucker for anything with those colors. :D
I've never really been a fan of impatiens, but now that I know that variety exists? You can bet the hunt is on starting tomorrow. I'm hoping I can find them here in Florida. I don't recall ever seeing them here. I'm also going to look for the Persian Shields. They will add some "new" color to my pool deck. Thanks for sharing! Looking forward to future videos.
HAHA! Crazy or delusional may be a way to describe it! It has always been important for my backyard, which is my getaway/safehaven to feel like it is somewhere other than my everyday surroundings, so i like the tropical esthetic over just boxwoods, day lilies and knock out roses like all the landscapes around here. Don't get me wrong, i love all of those plants, especially the lilies and roses, but i keep those in the more formal front yard landscape. lol, impatiens are pretty great, they are are easy, cheap and floriferous! I like you taste in colors! i know, at least in central florida the care for the sunimpatiens is a little different because they can keep on growing year-round, i think they just need to be cut back every six months or so to keep them going. Oh, sunimpatiens with persian shield is right up my alley, that will be stunning!
Tropical Plant Party
I got both the sun impatiens and the persian shield! So excited! The impatiens I found (at Ace Hardware) are very stalky so I've trimmed them back a bit so they will (hopefully) fill out instead of straight up. Attempting to grow more from some of the cuttings as well. We'll see. I haven't had much luck in the past when dealing with cuttings. Oh and had 2 hummingbirds at my firecracker plant today! So exciting!!
Very nice Jeff,
I really like,well, all of the garden. What sticks out for me, is what is the variety of Impatiens out front? How much sun do they get? I think you had said they are on drip irrigation? I would like to try those in the front of my large Alocasia pots in the front of my house next year. I get a nice E/SE morning sun and then a hit of late afternoon sun briefly. Yours are absolutely gorgeous.
I just wanted to put a plug in for a video on the Orchids. I have recently started to bring some into the house/summer outside garden and have so many questions. I have picked up (very cheaply i must say thanks to the Floral lady in the store where I work) mostly Phalaenopsis, but three very nice and different varieties of Cymbidium. This is the first year for most. I had picked up one of the Cymbidium last summer( sadly did not bloom this year), and I need to divide the three of those this summer. Anywho, I would look forward to a video on the general care,do's don'ts etc.. on orchid care.
The Garden looks great, I wish we had as long of a growing season as You, but hey....we have colder Winters so we win right?
Sure Pal...
Kevin
hi kevin! Sorry it took me so long to respond, this comment for some reason was in the spam section... youtube isn't very smart.
There are 2 types of impatiens out front, the variegated ones are the sunpatiens variegated tropical rose and orange, while all of the others are the standard elfin mix impatiens. The sunpatiens are the ones along the driveway. I think having them around your alocasia would look wonderful!
As far as the orchids go, sounds like you are gaining quite the variety! Cymbidiums have different variations on heat tolerance and bloom time, however standard cymbs like a lot of sun and cool evening temps(when soil is dry) in the fall, this is a big part of what encourages their blooms. Phals are not as particular but cooler night temps and warm day temps seem to spring them into spike just fine. Mine kind of just bloom throughout the year seemingly whenever they want to. I'm still on the fence with getting back into orchid videos, other than just tours and updates, but a basic care guide might be fun and good suggestion that i'm considering. Again, im so sorry it took me so long to get back to you!
WOW! Everything looks great. Love the caladiums.
Thank you, Tina! The caladiums are doing great this year!
I love love love your garden!!!!!! It reminds me of the yards, natural surroundings and the Garden’s I saw when growing up a short while in Ft. Myers, Florida (Gulf Coast, basically middle of the state but on the west side, not far from Tampa or Orlando) being so close to the ocean the tropical flowers and fruits we would be lucky to have in our neighborhood was like going on a treasure hunt!
So a few of my questions would be, do you start over each year with the perennial or house plant pieces you use in the yard as well as under potting for the palms? I know you have a company pick up the palms to store over winter for you, I didn’t see any smaller flowers go with them.. So how do you keep them alive? I am in a zone 6/5 and would love to get another hibiscus, had one for around 5 years I would just bring in for the winter but it was always something as far as spider mites or something else fighting me to keep it alive so any help would be amazing, you obviously know what you are doing!! Again thank you as always for taking the time to share your beautiful and amazing space! So far this year all the efforts have really paid off and I look forward to continue seeing the updates through the season ✌🏼💚🌺🌿🤗
Hi Jasmine! Thank you for all of your kind words!
Ft. Meyers is stunning, I have only driven through on my way to North Captiva a few times, but its just gorgeous!
The plants planted under the palms that are stored are not guaranteed by the greenhouse people, so it's just a roll of the dice if they make it, usually they don't and i have to start over, which sucks! I am actually sitting looking at my Alexander palm right now deciding what to plant under it, and i think im just going with the cheapest clearance annuals I have laying around, for that exact reason... but who knows what i'll do.
For the Hibiscus...
They can definitely be troublesome sometimes indoors. If the only issue is critters showing up on them in the winter time, then i would suggest giving the plant a systemic insecticide monthly, or per the directions on the bottle far before first frost hits, so maybe 8 weeks before you bring it inside. The systemics works best when the plants are actively growing, so its good to start early with them when it is warm out. Then a few weeks after (not at the same time) apply a foliar/topical insecticide with enough of a window that you can give it 2 treatments before bringing it inside. Once it is indoors keep a bottle of horticultural oil nifty, neem oil, and apply it to the tops and bottoms of the leaves every few weeks.
Oh and if you have pets or children that might ingest any of the plant, then disregard everything i said about the insecticides! If the problem is specifically spider mites, keep the plant where there is good air circulation around it and try to give it some humidity, spider mites hate wet air a moving air. You can do this by keeping a fan near the plant and aiming it so the air moves around, or passed the plant, but not directly on it. For humidity people use pebble trays, humidifiers, and really just giving the foliage a good spray of water daily helps as well.
If you are more natural with your plants than a adding some peppermint oil to a spray bottle with water works very well also. There are a lot of ways to treat naturally actually, dish soap, rubbing alcohol etc... depends on what the bugs are. So the best advice i can give is to be proactive and start treating before the plants come in and don't forget to fertilize regularly to keep the plant nice and healthy to survive any insects that may show up. Hibiscus in particular like a lot of potassium, which many fertilizers lack copious amounts of. Potassium strengthens cell walls and can help create a sturdier hibiscus. There are fertilizers available online specifically for hibiscus, or you can just use a regular all-purpose and add some molasses, maybe a tablespoon to a gallon of water, its hard to dissolve it, i usually just blend it up into molasses chunks in the water. lol.
I know this was long winded but wanted to cover all the bases. Hope this was helpful!
Excellent garden that must take a lot of work, I don't have a quarter of what you have and I'm busy every weekend lol!
thank you so much! it is my passion, therapy and business, so i love every second of it!... except mulching, i really don't like mulching. lol.
Super gorgeous garden and such a fun enthusiastic gardener and plantsman.You know we are all coming over ,I will bring the rum,Eldorado of course,Cuba Libre anyone.
Haha! Thank you, Judy!😂🤣😂😂
Yes, great idea, planting your succulents in the pot you have already. Your banana trees look great, my mother has one banana tree and it doesn’t look as great as your. Do you fertilize the trees frequently?
Typically i give them a high nitrogen continuous release fertilizer after they put out their second or third leaves, then i fertilize with a liquid weekly or bi-weekly after... but i've been bad this year and haven't given a liquid yet. :/
Tropical Plant Party thank you
Love all your plants! At 9:47 what is that variegated plant sounds like you say Rhodia but I tried a search with that name and came up empty. One mysteriously showed up at our place (We grow annuals, vegetables, perennials, but no tropicals like you have) I snapped it up. It was in a tiny pot with no identification on it. It looks like it will be very similar to what you have there. I do believe you've got me hooked on tropicals though much to my husband's chagrin!
Hi Cheryl! Those are Rhoeos! I love them, and actually have a video on them that should be out by thursday. :)Haha! I'm glad you've got the bug now for tropicals!
Awesome tour! Thanks for sharing!
Thank you so much! That ones is from a couple of years ago, I promise I've gotten my hands under control since then! 😆😂🤣
Also, your cactus garden is absolutely gorgeous! Queen palms are one of my favs, however, they tend to grow very large pods, and when they open, they spew green balls every where, and I mean every where, lol! They're a pain in the --- ! If you were in Northern California, I'd hire you in a hot second! Lol - 😎🌴🌵
Thank you! That is quite the compliment! Yes i have heard they are very messy palms, luckily the growing season here is too short for them to go into flower, so i haven't had to worry about that.
Beautiful of course, but quick question please! What zone are you at, may I know? Where did you find such a gorgeous garden hose?????? I love the bright color!!!!
Hi Tropical, what part of the country do you live in? With 11° below zero, your plants survived really well. I assumed you lived in zone 10 somewhere in Florida. Thanks for the video.
Hello! I am right in the middle, St. Louis, i live on the border of zones 6a/6b. I am particularly the gingers survived! I lost one clump of them, but that was a more tropical variety that i had been surprised was coming back in previous years to begin with. They are smaller than ever, but with enough tlc they should get back to normal soon enough! i wish i was in zone 10!
You do an amazing job! I never would have guessed -what all that you have achieved -could be done in zone 6.
I loved!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Georgious garden & yard. Love all color & height. Must be so beautiful, lite up at night. Tyfs
Beautiful plant tour! You have a wonderful retreat!❤️
Thank you Janie!
I really liked this video. Your yards are gorgeous!!
Thank you, Tammy!
Uau!!! Extraordinario o seu jardim...Parabéns...No. Brasil temos plantas tropicais maravilhosas...mas seu jardim é realmente surpreendente...
Wonderful garden. Have you considered a Papaya tree? Where are you located? I was confused when you said the temperature got down to -11, yet your Coconut tree survived.
You mentioned minus 11 degrees in winter, how do all those tropical plants survive, do they all disappear and regrow each season
Hey Greg! I move the tropicals into my garage in the winter and I mulch the hardy bananas, gingers, elephant ears and hardy palms. 😊
Looking georgous great job!
Green thumb envy! Every time I buy sweet potatoe vines they just die on me
Good variety... I like Ecological Gardens....🌎
It’s breathtaking. Good on ya 👏👏👏
thank you!
Wow!
Lovely garden! Thanks for sharing
such a beautiful garden best i have seen love it
thank you!
garden looks great! keep cool and get an ice tea!
a big iced tea sounds marvelous right now! Thank you!
Love this and your fun narration ❤️ In what zone are you? Beautiful!
Hey do you have a video where you show your gingers in bloom?
Ese jardin es un verdadero paraiso!! Me enamore d esas plantas y ese jardin🥰💕👏👏amo las palmeras,besos desde argentina😘
If you have more bees...more butterflies... hummingbirds...You have an Ecological Garden 🌎
Soooo pretty. I love your garden! Would you by any chance know the name of the large-leaf plants at 13:24?
Lebene thank you so much! Unfortunately those were just sold as assorted Alocasias. I don't know the specific name of the variety with any certainty. I'm sorry!
No worries. I will search for it. Love your channel. Can't wait to see more videos. :)
Thank you so much!
Wow everything looks great! Do you bring in your anthuriums in for winter and if so do you have to deal with bugs? Your pool is so pretty, Btw I love orange and pink together!
Haha, I love orange and pink together also, but these hydrangeas have very pale pink flowers, i'm just unsure if the extreme difference in shades will be distracting, but i love loud colors and i love those sun impatiens so i'm actually ok with it. I do bring the anthuriums inside during winter, bugs haven't been a major problem with them so far.
Your garden is beautiful ❤
The garden looks BEAUTIFUL!!! 👍 Don't cut the green plants next to the pool there perfect 👌 💯
Thank you so much! I don't think i'm going to cut them, even if they are choking out the petunias, i kind of just want to let them go and see how big they get! ... as long as they become a tripping hazard, which they very well may... i'll just watch my step or wear a helmet. HAHA!
My gosh your plants look amazing
Love them
thank you! Many are kind of cooked because it went from cold spring to blazing hot summer out of nowhere, but they are hanging in ok. :)
14:18 What a beautiful combination of colour , foliage, form and texture.
thank you so much! I can't wait for summer to get here!
very nice your garden
Amazing garden and plants
Beautiful I love it!I have a question, the Alocatias are come back every year? thank you !! love your videos 👍💓💕
Thank you so much! In my zone they are not perennials, the bulbs need to be lifted and stored for winter north of zone 8 with these varieties. :)
Do you allow yours to go fully dormant? I have started to keep the plant potted up in a pot just large enough to get it in the house. Then cut each stalk just above where the next leaf will emerge, and let it sit for the winter inside. Usually around the end of February, the leaves will start to emerge from those stalks.Then I start to water. This has given me a much larger plant, earlier in zone 4.
Kevin
Where are you located? Your garden is beautiful !
thank you! I am in St. Louis, Missouri :)
Hi, what maintenance do you do to your plants? Water,fertilizer etc. thanks!
Inpatients are the best garden flower by far.
Wow amazing
Thank you, Kadence!
So beautiful!!!!!
thank you!
😍 wow! I'm speechless. 😍
Just fabulous!
Thank you! I miss it so much!
Beautiful! What state do you live in? You have amazing plants wow
Hello, and thank you! I am in St. Louis, Missouri, right on the border of zone 6a/6b
Tropical Plant Party wow I wish I lived in that zone. I’m up in Canada. I just found your channel and love it
Would you add Red Sisters ? The Hawaiian Ti Plant
that would be beautiful!
Wow its amazing 🤩
Muitas lindeza juntas .😊😀🌷
Wow beautiful 👍 😍 🌴
beautiful love it
Love the plants and landscaping. The hands and fingers, not so much
👍😁😕
Cheguei aqui para contribuir com o crescimento do canal esta tudo lindo ❤
Beautiful 😍 😍 👍 👍
Que lindooooooo!!
What’s the music around 11:08?
That is, "summer crush" by Maiwan
Tropical Plant Party thanks! Been binging your videos. The longer the better. Silly me, you’ve been using this song all the time :D
But these all plants not in pakistan 😔😔😔
Oh no, i'm sorry to hear that!
Bro where it is
Good job
Show lindo demais
Very artistic
Wow
What zone is this?
Que jardim lindo!!
Ola passando para conhecer o canal e adorei gosto mt desse tipo de conteúdo, se puder venha me fazer uma visitinha, e ver minha colheita de morangos bjs
you garden is beautiful
Do you have a favourite coleus??
thank you, Manuel! No favorite, too many to pick from, although, there is a variety called, Alabama Sunset that gets hot pink stems with the right sun and soil ph... I do really like that one!
🌷🌷🌷👌🦋
What state do you live in?
Hi Robin, I'm in Missouri
@@TropicalPlantParty I live in Arizona. I want to grow a food forest and garden on my 10 acres in Tonopah. It gets cold here in the winter for tropical plants such as Mangos but I have not given up even though I lost all three mango trees last winter. I am working on growing my microclimate and then I will try again with the mangos and bananas and other tropical plants.
Absolutely beautiful garden but I found your hands very distracting.
Lindo jardim
அருமை அருமை அருமை 🌴🌿🌳🌺🥦🇱🇰🍁🌱🥦
More Biodiversity...very important 🌎
the speed of your speech is exhausting
LOWE sonia well we can't all be perfect and please everybody, sorry my linguistics aren't to your liking
Will u give me your garden collections without money please please please please please please please please please
Get rid of the hands 😂 so distracting 😉 Jamaica.