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.
The Texas state flower. Plant seeds in mid-autumn for spring blooms.
A summer wildflower with fragrant leaves and stacks of pink pom-poms.
Dandelion brightens fields and lawns with its spring flowers (whether you want it or not.)
This fragrant wildflower makes any flower garden extra special.
A familiar roadside wildflower.
Strawberry colored blooms make great cut flowers.
Striking pink plumes herald the onset of autumn temperatures.
An old-fashioned favorite, and a lovely addition to the spring garden.
Deer resistant, sun-loving and able to thrive in dry, thin or sandy soils.
A great wildflower for garden beds, growing and reseeding easily in a wide variety of conditions.
A brightly colored roadside favorite and a sure sign that summer is here.
A tough low-growing annual useful for sunny borders.
A tough wildflower with cheerful flowers in summer.
This tiny wildflower is easily overlooked, but provides beauty and a resting place for butterflies.
An easy-to-grow early spring wildflower, native to shade.
A wildflower with yellow-orange blooms, for a sunny accent in any landscape.
Bright green and white foliage for an early taste of winter.
A grassland perennial with masses of pink.
Blankets of carefree flowers from late spring through summer.
A fall-blooming native senna for thin rocky soils.
Purple chalices brighten spring roadsides in South Texas.
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