Explore the variety of native and adapted plants for your corner of Texas — whether you’re looking for color, shade, a home for wildlife or just never want to mow again.
A shade-tolerant foundation shrub.
A large evergreen shrub that can tolerate shade.
A tall prairie grass, as an alternative to pampas and other ornamentals.
A brightly colored roadside favorite and a sure sign that summer is here.
A familiar roadside wildflower.
A tree-sized attention-getter with flamboyant red tubeflowers.
For fans of Texas madrone, a crape myrtle with striking red trunks.
A great wildflower for garden beds, growing and reseeding easily in a wide variety of conditions.
“One hundred days of red.”
An evergreen shrub with cascades of tiny trumpet flowers.
An evergreen accent for partial shade.
An early wildflower that adds color to spring landscapes and roadsides.
A grassland perennial with masses of pink.
A widely used evergreen hedge, despite problems with Entomosporium disease.
The state grass of Texas!
Soft feathery foliage with outsized flower heads.
Playful ice sculptures at the first freeze of every year.
One of the loveliest Texas native trees, with peeling bark revealing muscular red trunks.
A woodland shade grass with drooping seedheads.
A carefree addition to the butterfly garden, easy to grow in any soil type.
A pretty understory native, best grown beneath large shade trees.
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