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 prickly holly with a compact form, making an effective security barrier.
A tree-sized evergreen holly.
The best evergreen holly for San Antonio.
A bolt-upright version of the yaupon holly.
For dry or moist shade, with unique holly-like foliage.
Spectacular red berries on bare winter stems.
Distinctive horned leaves, with red holly berries.
Dwarf in name only. ‘Burford’ is a classic rounded shrub with red Christmas berries.
A dwarf yaupon for low hedges and topiary.
An invasive privet that forms monocultural stands, dominating native woodlands in Texas and the Southeastern U.S. Not recommended.
A star in the fall, with clusters of brilliant purple berries.
A mid-sized Southern evergreen useful for screening in deep soils.
A shade-tolerant foundation shrub.
A signature Texas native: deer-proof and drought proof.
Like a little live oak with thorns, and big fragrance in bloom.
A tall cedar for deeper soils, widely distributed in the eastern half of the country but barely reaching San Antonio in its native range.
A old-fashioned garden favorite for the perennial border.
Fast growing and evergreen.
A Mediterranean plant with a dramatic effect.
Distinctive, red, bushy blooms on an evergreen shrub.
Ideal for deep soil and shade, if you have enough moisture.
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