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 of the most drought-tolerant big bunchgrasses, with playful, billowy foliage. Despite the name, no relation to bamboo.
That moss-like texture on bare rocky outcrops is a native muhly grass.
A show-stopping ruby beauty in the fall season.
A native bunchgrass with silvery plumes in autumn.
A tailored version of the classic century agave.
A big-striped agave with curly leaves and tropical flair.
Wands of purple blooms attract fall hummingbirds.
A native accent for any dry area.
Fast growing and evergreen.
A native sedge that thrives in the soil under mountain cedar.
A tough shrub with so many butterflies it can be hard to see the flowers.
A fast-growing shrub or small tree, great for screening.
An evergreen mound lily that’s a softy.
Big yellow bouquets all season long. One of the hardiest — and loveliest — West Texas native shrubs.
A western subshrub with showy mimosa flowers.
The signature southwestern yucca: an emphatic focal point in any landscape.
Branches of needle-like leaves that truly look like a bushy fox’s tail.
A wild daisy for gravelly soils: see it dotting the Texas Hill Country all year long.
Catclaw thorns and a big floral display that attracts orioles and hummingbirds.
A very rare native finding new life in hummingbird gardens.
Copperlily adds unexpected color to summer and fall natural areas.
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