I have frequented Zone 9 Tropicals, a little nursery not very far from my house, for years. It is run from the back garden of a bungalow here in the Heights. They also have a great mail order business.
The Heights Garden Club had our September meeting there. We meet the second Saturday of most months at 10 in the morning to tour local gardens. We had a private tour by Wayne DuPont, one of the owners. He talked to us about some of the plants they have in stock just now. The nursery takes up the whole back yard with a year round cover to keep the tropicals protected. Many of the plants are hardy and can be planted in the ground here in Houston. Others are best kept in pots or will need protecting against hard freezes that we seem to have a few times each winter.
We had a great turnout! Wayne is very knowledgeable and passionate about plants. On their website they admit to being professed plant nuts. I love plant nuts! At the end of the talk everyone got a number and when it was called they got to pick a plant to take home from a table set out for us. This created lots of excitement and was very generous of them. Of course they know we will be back : ) You can never have just one!
There were so many interesting plants tucked in and hanging in every spare inch. Shawn and I went back the following Sunday to talk to Wayne and see more of the plants without the crowds. In doing research after the tour I came across and great article written by a friend of mine, Viula Torgerson, in her blog The Heights Life. She gives more history about how Zone 9 Tropicals came to be. If you live in the Heights or close by this is a must follow blog to keep up to date with what is going on in our neighborhood!
One of the things the article mentioned was that Zone 9 Tropicals was expanding. When we went back to visit on Sunday we asked Wayne about this. As a garden designer I am so excited to hear they are expanding. I am always on the hunt for unusual and interesting plants for my customers. Wayne told us they hope to open next year on 6 acres a few miles north of the Heights. I will keep you posted!

Madagascar Jasmine, Stephanotis floribunda
You can see its double seed pod.
While Shawn was enjoying talking plants with Wayne, I was on the look out for something to put in a new hanging basket I just got in the mail. I kept going back to the Madagascar Jasmine. It will have to spend part of winter hanging in our kitchen. Luckily we have a rather large kitchen and it serves as our green house with its big skylights when we are going to have temps below 32 degrees.
There were many plants I had never seen before. And they were very tempting! Growing up in San Diego we didn’t have hard frosts and growing plants like these was so easy. Here I have to try and contain myself to things that I can keep on my porch and take inside without too much work when the temperatures dip below freezing.
The spiky one on the right is Zamorano Dragon Fruit.
Even though summer here is like living in a hot house, after 16 years, I still haven’t adjusted.
-Clitoria ternatea “Double Blue Butterfly Pea Vine”
I love the delicate blue flowers of the Pea vine above. And I would love to try the Climbing Oleander! You can see more of what they have on their website, http://www.zone9tropicals.com/
I loved the leaves of this Bauhinia. Wayne didn’t know the variety and said it has never flowered but is rooted into the ground from its pot. He got it from Fairchild Tropical Botanical Garden. He is hoping to have some for sale later this year.
And here our the lovely plants that came home with us. For our two give away plants we picked a Alocasia “Frydek”, a Madagascar Palm Pachypodium lamerei . We paid for the Fiddle leaf fig.
Buddha in peaceful meditation welcoming us back the following Sunday.
Happy Gardening!
Hi. A quick question: how are you able to use your kitchen as a greenhouse? I have a hallway with all windows that is just begging for be used as a greenhouse. Won’t the heat kill the plants? Thanks. Ramona
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Good question Ramona, i don’t heat my house all that much because Houston has pretty mild winters and the day time temps get up to the 60 or even 70 and my house is very old and drafty. Actually it is harder for me to keep plants inside in the summer because the A/C takes out the humidity. The ones that are in get rain water and I also mist them with rain water. If the heat really dries out the air in winter I put on a steaming kettle or just set out bowls of water. The main thing is to keep them from freezing. The other place I use is my downstairs bathroom which has okay light and a big claw-foot tub that I can set plants in. Mind you we only have max 3 week of below freezing temps. I am considering a green house if these cold snaps continue. It used to be that Houston was sub-tropical but last winter we got down to 18 degrees. I am not complaining winter in Houston is lovely, just wish it would make up its mind : )
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Beautiful plants, Laurin! I like the display of the last one.
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Me too Amy…Buddha reminds me to live in the moment and so do plants!
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🙂
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What a lovely nursery. I love tropical plants. I only wish I could grow plants like the lovely Mussaenda.
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I love that is is a home grown thing! I love going there just to breath the air : )
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I visited one of their open days a few years ago and loved seeing the plants covering every available square inch. Thanks for the tour, it’s so nice to see the hobby that grew into a business is now growing into its own space.
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I am happy you like the tour! If you are in town again give me a shout : )
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Oh I would love that! Houston is my hometown and we lived in the Heights when I was very young before moving out to the “suburbs”. I still have family there so it’s a possibility.
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Looks like a great tour. I am so sorry I missed it. Thanks for all the pictures!
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It was Janet, you will have to stop by when you are back from Oregon!
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Beautiful demonstration. I have a Bauhinia monandra 16 month tree (it’s the Pink Orchid Bauhinia) and it’s coming along real well, except that of course, they grow a bit slow. But I’ve seen very young Purple Orchid Bauhinias in full bloom (here in P.R. when they get to be 2-3 years old) and they look gorgeous, so small and in bloom. I also have one year old Poinciana Trees (all different sizes, yellow and red flower forms), but those I’m still keeping in pots. I’ve seen some very young Poincianas which have bloomed in pots (large pots, after 2-3 years). Very few people have been able to bonsai a Poinciana, but some can slow their growth and enjoy a few blooms from a young tree. Normally they are humongous and will break sidewalks and pipes. They need to be in an open field. I’m trying to finish a coastal by-the-sea garden, but I have not finished it yet, as the choice for salt-tolerant plants has not been easy. It’s my biggest challenge now.
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Thank you for the information. I might try one in a pot. We have a few around the neighborhood that are so lovely when they bloom. Salt tolerant is difficult but I know you will get there.
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Oh, wow. On the one hand I’d be thrilled to have something like that in my neighborhood — and yet I just know I’s spend way too much money haha. Seriously, it looks like a great place to find some unusual beauties. Thanks for sharing.
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It is a fun place and hard to resist!
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