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Native Plants

  • Out of stock
    Glowing apricot-orange cups bloom much of the year on silvery desert foliage — a low-desert and high-desert native that thrives on heat, lean soil, and almost n
  • One of the very best wildlife plants in California — host to over 200 butterfly and moth species and a lifeline for early bees.
  • A fast, dense gray-green shrub that makes a superb desert screen or windbreak and may attract more birds than anything else you plant.
  • Sculptural mahogany-red bark and smoky blue-gray leaves make this one of our most striking large manzanitas.
  • Blue Elderberry Attractive, hardy, and easy to grow, the Blue Elderberry is also an important food source for California wildlife. In spring, large clusters of cream-colored flowers attract butterflies and bees. The abundant blue berries provide food for birds and other animals. Humans can eat the fruit as long as it's cooked.
  • A charming, ultra-hardy native bunchgrass (good to -30°F) with whimsical horizontal 'eyebrow' seed heads in summer.
  • Not a grass at all but a petite iris, scattering star-shaped blue-violet flowers with sunny yellow centers across grassy tufts each spring.
  • Out of stock
    Clusters of starry blue-lavender flowers with golden centers bloom much of the year, buzz-pollinated by native bees.
  • A rugged, cold-hardy wild lilac (to -10°F) that smothers itself in fragrant white spring blooms abuzz with native bees.
  • Glowing orange-apricot trumpets cover this cheerful subshrub spring through summer, irresistible to hummingbirds and a key butterfly host.
  • CA Buckwheat (Eriogonum fasciculatum) is one of the most hardy, drought resistant, and wildlife supporting plants you can add to your space! With beautiful white blooms that age to pink, maroon, rust, then brown, and foliage that looks like little pine needles, it is a gorgeous addition.
  • Soft silvery foliage erupts in a haze of lavender daisies just as summer fades — late-season nectar when pollinators need it most.
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