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Let SAWS help you get gardening

Bursting with ideas on how to make your yard a water-saving beauty? Use our rebates and coupons to help make your outdoor living dreams come true!

Gardening itch got you scratching already? Although at least one more cold front is still in store, we can see and feel the signs of spring all around.

Gorgeous green leaves of early spring are appearing in earnest and birds are bursting into song. Ever the diligent gardener, you’ve probably already begun prepping your garden beds, removing dead plant material and pulling weeds. And you’re bursting with ideas on how to make your yard a water-saving beauty — not just for yourself, but for pollinators and wildlife too.

WaterSaver coupons and rebates can help you create a more sustainable, affordable landscape, while conserving our most precious resource.

With the WaterSaver Landscape coupon, you can purchase beautiful native, drought tolerant plants that can handle our summers. All you have to do is remove 200 square feet of grass (about the size of a parking space) and you can get a $125 coupon to use towards plants or trees.

Are you also looking to convert struggling turfgrass into a new patio, permeable deck or flagstone? You may also be eligible for an Outdoor Living Rebate.

If you have an irrigation system you want to update — or banish forever — the Residential Irrigation Design rebate can help you make changes or ditch the entire system. Just remember to schedule a free irrigation consultation before you begin any work.

These are just a few of the programs SAWS offers. For upcoming classes on pollinator gardening, native plant selection, rainwater harvesting and proper pruning, check the GardenStyleSA events calendar.

Picture of Gail Dugelby
Gail Dugelby
Gail Dugelby is a SAWS conservation consultant with deep roots in San Antonio and the Hill Country. She spent her youth climbing trees, playing in the Guadalupe River, and exploring the outdoors. This drives her passion for nature and our diverse environment, especially our most precious natural resource — water. Given the choice, she would be outside all the time.
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