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 wild morning-glory for native fencelines.
A mid-sized pine with a moderate growth rate.
The sweet vanilla fragrance is a butterfly magnet.
A tough ornamental tree or shrub, native to Southwest Texas and Mexico.
The Sandpaper Tree: a South Texas specialty.
An early wildflower that adds color to spring landscapes and roadsides.
Purple chalices brighten spring roadsides in South Texas.
The go-to native milkweed for clay, sand and caliche if you want to attract monarch butterflies.
A big and fast-growing suburban shade tree, but not famously long-lived.
A West Texas evergreen, and a fast-growing anchor for the watersaver landscape.
Fast-growing and fragrant.
Aromatic, feathery foliage adds a touch of silver to the shade garden.
A petite, architectural agave.
A faux fern, bright green and drought-tolerant.
A fine-textured evergreen senna.
A workhorse in the watersaver garden.
The classic swamp cypress: plant it near water.
Ball moss lives in tree branches and feasts on morning dew: not a parasite, but an epiphyte.
A semi-evergreen native shrub; mockingbirds love the berries.
A small Rio Grande evergreen with an upright habit.
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