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.
Butterflies love this large salvia and it thrives in even the hottest of months.
A free-flowering, compact salvia with dramatic purple or blue flower stalks in summer.
A Mexican sage with fiery red dragon-head flowers.
A compact and very xeric salvia, with electric blue flowers all season long.
A well-formed semi-evergreen salvia that prefers a bit of shade in summer.
“Black and blue” flowers for the shade garden.
A big perennial sage with long wands of yellow flowers.
A workhorse in the watersaver garden.
A very rare native finding new life in hummingbird gardens.
Red flowers and leaves with a sweet pineapple flavor.
Silver leaves and brilliant purple flowers.
The wild South Texas shrub sage.
A tough native salvia for the shade garden.
Wands of purple blooms attract fall hummingbirds.
Pink amazement!
A West Texas shrub sage with vermilion red flowers.
Blue bloom spikes on a drought-hardy Texas perennial.
Cute, scalloped leaves and bright red blooms that stand out in the shade.
The classic culinary sage.
A big clumping salvia with sharply perfumed leaves.
A sprawling aromatic groundcover or shrub that can be used in the kitchen.
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