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 big pink Turk’s Cap.
A hummingbird’s favorite, and an easy-growing native addition to the shaded landscape.
An informal native groundcover with red berries.
Silvery leaves add a cool touch to summer days.
A big perennial sage with long wands of yellow flowers.
A star in the fall, with clusters of brilliant purple berries.
A lovely spring bulb with bright magenta blossoms.
One of the most ornamental of all desert plants.
Outstanding fall color.
Playful ice sculptures at the first freeze of every year.
The native pepper is hot, spicy and ridiculously easy to grow.
A rustic woodland viburnum for a shaded evergreen edge.
An ouch-less yucca. Caution is advised, however, because you may fall in love with this low-maintenance ornamental.
A soft commercial yucca, used for brightening up shade.
Slender, arching branches of glowing red tube flowers.
Attracts butterflies, spreads rapidly, and requires very little maintenance.
No need to irrigate this Texas native that attracts and feeds wildlife.
Dwarf in name only. ‘Burford’ is a classic rounded shrub with red Christmas berries.
A selection with cool purplish flowers even more colorful than redbud.
An ornamental grass that hearkens back to the tallgrass prairie.
Best redbud for San Antonio.
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