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.
“One hundred days of red.”
A Texas-sized crape myrtle, with waterfalls of silvery-pink blossoms all summer long.
For fans of Texas madrone, a crape myrtle with striking red trunks.
Ball moss lives in tree branches and feasts on morning dew: not a parasite, but an epiphyte.
A semi-evergreen native shrub; mockingbirds love the berries.
A fast-growing shrub or small tree, great for screening.
One of the loveliest Texas native trees, with peeling bark revealing muscular red trunks.
Silver and black: persimmon is a tough small tree and a true San Antonio native.
Exceptional heat and drought tolerance.
A tree-sized evergreen torchwood.
Fast-growing and fragrant.
A tree-sized evergreen holly.
Known by either Rose of Sharon or Althea, this small tree hibiscus will flower all summer long.
Distinctive, red, bushy blooms on an evergreen shrub.
A cold-hardy native citrus, for fans of the low-maintenance evergreen meatball.
Golden flowers all summer long.
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