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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
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A fast, dense gray-green shrub that makes a superb desert screen or windbreak and may attract more birds than anything else you plant.
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A charming, ultra-hardy native bunchgrass (good to -30°F) with whimsical horizontal 'eyebrow' seed heads in summer.
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Wands of warm golden flowers light up the late-season garden and feed pollinators stocking up for winter.
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Blooms when almost nothing else does — pendant rose-pink flower clusters from late fall through winter, feeding hummingbirds in the lean season.
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A nearly indestructible bright-green desert shrub for the hottest, driest, most neglected corners of a low-desert or foothill garden.
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Tall spikes of rosy-pink trumpets above blue-gray clasping leaves — a desert-mountain native of the SoCal ranges, hardy through Zones 5–9.
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A fountain of silvery, fine-toothed straps radiating from a low trunk — a sculptural high-desert evergreen that's far hardier than it looks, taking cold to ~-5°
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Not a true willow but a desert show-stopper — orchid-like pink-lavender trumpets all summer that hummingbirds can't resist, on a fast, airy small tree.
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One of the very best evergreen groundcovers for dry shade under oaks — glossy aromatic leaves on burgundy stems that smell of wine after rain, with rose-red lat
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Brilliant scarlet tubular spikes that hummingbirds chase, and far more cold-hardy than Scarlet Bugler — it grows wild to 8,000 ft and beyond in the Great Basin.
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One of the toughest plants in the West — a silvery high-desert shrub good to nearly -20°F and 8,000 ft, thriving in lean alkaline soil where little else will.

