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 petite, architectural agave.
A large greenish-blue specimen agave.
An attractive agave with a compact form and smooth, tailored leaves.
West Texas chic. Blue leaves and jet-black spines.
A soft thornless agave.
A mid-sized, slim-leaved agave often used in containers.
A tidy ornamental agave.
A tailored version of the classic century agave.
A big-striped agave with curly leaves and tropical flair.
The classic southwestern agave: toothy, big, and blue.
A soft agave-manfreda hybrid, for ornamental use in dry settings.
A tough, fierce agave great for erosion control.
An architectural succulent for extreme symmetry in extreme conditions.
A thornless architectural evergreen, and a stalwart in the hummingbird garden.
Smaller and softer than common boxwood, great for specimens or low hedges.
Dragonhead’s the name for this aggressive, herbaceous groundcover.
A tough shrub with so many butterflies it can be hard to see the flowers.
A Christmas cactus for fencelines, barriers and native effects.
Rattlesnake agave!
Creates a beautiful cascading effect when planted in pots or along raised edges.
A compact and very xeric salvia, with electric blue flowers all season long.
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