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 West Texas native with long waxy stems.
A unique prickly pear: spiny pads look like a cow’s tongue after a mouthful of cactus.
A great low-maintenance texture for WaterSaver landscapes.
A great plant for the starter gardener, ghost plant is one of the easiest succulents to grow.
A bulletproof accent with a long bloom season.
An architectural succulent for extreme symmetry in extreme conditions.
A fast-growing groundcover with fleshy leaves and bright, summery flowers.
Dragon’s blood! A southwest Texas succulent for the native landscape.
Rattlesnake agave!
A soft agave-manfreda hybrid, for ornamental use in dry settings.
A signature West Texas plant, pole-like and spiny.
A Christmas cactus for fencelines, barriers and native effects.
A delicate succulent for small spaces.
A slow-growing succulent with a big footprint and tiny slipper flowers.
A fiercely spiny and very ornamental aloe.
The not-so prickly pear.
Welcome to Texas!
A dramatic South African aloe with torchlike yellow flowers.
A tree-sized pencil cactus, flowering in spring.
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