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 signature Texas native: deer-proof and drought proof.
A West Texas evergreen, and a fast-growing anchor for the watersaver landscape.
A workhorse in the watersaver garden.
Ball moss lives in tree branches and feasts on morning dew: not a parasite, but an epiphyte.
An evergreen wiregrass well-adapted to Hill Country ledges.
A branching form of the classic Big Bend yucca.
A native blue wiregrass for Texas Hill Country limestone.
An elegant West Texas yucca, widely used in landscaping.
One of the most ornamental of all desert plants.
A native accent for any dry area.
A West Texas native with long waxy stems.
An evergreen vine, with sunny yellow flowers in early spring.
A native sedge that thrives in the soil under mountain cedar.
Texas Sage is the ultimate South Texas shrub: it thrives in summer heat.
A mid-sized Southern evergreen useful for screening in deep soils.
One of the few thornless South Texas evergreens… but the berries are poisonous.
A well-behaved evergreen with trumpet flowers.
Tiny, bright yellow blooms and fragrant evergreen foliage.
A small trunkless palm native to southeast Texas and Hill Country seeps.
A tall cedar for deeper soils, widely distributed in the eastern half of the country but barely reaching San Antonio in its native range.
The most durable and adaptable oak for south-central Texas.
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