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 majestic tree, one of the largest east of the Rockies.
A dense groundcover that attracts bees and butterflies.
A cold-hardy native citrus, for fans of the low-maintenance evergreen meatball.
Large, dense, and showy in autumn, with rich golden color.
A very dense, hardy turf that is insect and disease resistant.
Ball moss lives in tree branches and feasts on morning dew: not a parasite, but an epiphyte.
Texas Sage is the ultimate South Texas shrub: it thrives in summer heat.
A tree-sized evergreen torchwood.
A green-leaved cenizo with lavender flowers.
A native sedge that thrives in the soil under mountain cedar.
That moss-like texture on bare rocky outcrops is a native muhly grass.
A rustic woodland viburnum for a shaded evergreen edge.
Evergreen, adaptable, and a classic alternative for grass in shade.
Works well as a tall evergreen screen.
A spineless, hardy shrub for an instant native edge.
A western subshrub with showy mimosa flowers.
An easygoing Hill Country bush with daisylike flowers.
An eye-catching shade groundcover, with flowering purple foliage.
A West Texas evergreen, and a fast-growing anchor for the watersaver landscape.
A spiny, drought-hardy tree with lustrous dark evergreen leaves.
Always there, always green: boxwood is a classic for low hedges and topiary.
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