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.
The go-to native milkweed for clay, sand and caliche if you want to attract monarch butterflies.
A petite, architectural agave.
A faux fern, bright green and drought-tolerant.
A workhorse in the watersaver garden.
One of the most drought-tolerant big bunchgrasses, with playful, billowy foliage. Despite the name, no relation to bamboo.
An evergreen wiregrass well-adapted to Hill Country ledges.
A branching form of the classic Big Bend yucca.
A old-fashioned garden favorite for the perennial border.
A native blue wiregrass for Texas Hill Country limestone.
Strappy evergreen foliage with blooms in spring.
An elegant West Texas yucca, widely used in landscaping.
A wild daisy for gravelly soils: see it dotting the Texas Hill Country all year long.
Thornless, big and blue, for dramatic xeric textures.
The wild South Texas shrub sage.
One of the most ornamental of all desert plants.
Pink amazement!
A native accent for any dry area.
Lush foliage with orchid-like flowers.
A showy, perennial native milkweed.
An attractive agave with a compact form and smooth, tailored leaves.
Cute, scalloped leaves and bright red blooms that stand out in the shade.
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