We believe outdoor spaces should feel alive – filled with movement, seasonal color, pollinators and natural beauty that evolves over time.

Indian Blanket Flower (Gaillardia pulchella)
Mexican Hat Daisy (Ratibida columnifera)
Lanceleaf Coreopsis (Coreopsis lanceolata)
Damianita (Chrysactinia mexicana)
Buckley Yucca (Yucca constricta)
Velvet Senna (Senna Lindheimeriana)


Native Gulf Coast and Texas wildflowers bring vibrant seasonal color, movement, and pollinator activity to the landscape throughout the warmer months. Chosen for their resilience, extended bloom periods, and ability to thrive in Texas heat, the planting palette creates outdoor spaces that feel natural, dynamic, and alive. Layered blooms, sculptural textures, and year-round visual interest work together to support pollinators and beneficial wildlife while adding depth and movement to the landscape.

A long-blooming Texas native perennial known for vivid blue-purple flower spikes that attract bees, butterflies, and other pollinators throughout the warmer months. Its soft movement and seasonal color bring texture and life to Gulf Coast landscapes.

When first planted, this Mealy Blue Sage stood barely a foot tall with only a few blooms. Within a single growing season, it transformed into a full, vibrant planting alive with pollinators, movement, and color — a reminder that native landscapes become more beautiful and resilient over time.

This planting combines native and pollinator-friendly flowering perennials to create a landscape filled with movement, seasonal color, and habitat support throughout the warmer months. Layered textures, natural stonework, and long bloom cycles help the space feel both vibrant and balanced while attracting bees, butterflies, and other beneficial wildlife.

Featuring plants such as Mealy Blue Sage (Salvia farinacea), Gaura (Oenothera lindheimeri), Damianita (Chrysactinia mexicana), and Veronica (Veronica spicata), the landscape evolves naturally over time while remaining resilient in Gulf Coast conditions.

This combination blends delicate seasonal blooms with bold native structure to create a landscape that feels both natural and grounded. Blackfoot Daisy brings soft white flowers and long bloom periods that attract pollinators throughout the warmer months, while Nodding Yucca adds sculptural texture, movement, and year-round visual interest among the stone and planting layers.

Featuring Blackfood Daisy (Melampodium leucanthum) and Nodding Yucca (Yucca cernua), these Texas natives create resilient, low-water landscapes that feel balanced, layered, and alive.

Moving water transforms a landscape into more than just a garden — it creates habitat. Water features can attract frogs, dragonflies, butterflies, birds, and other beneficial wildlife while adding movement, sound, and natural cooling to outdoor spaces.

By combining native planting with natural stone and flowing water, these landscapes become living ecosystems that continue evolving over time.

Supports: Wildlife habitat · Natural movement · Soundscape · Pollinators · Ecosystem balance


Native landscapes become more vibrant and resilient over time. As plants establish, pollinators return, water features mature, and seasonal movement develops, outdoor spaces begin to feel more connected to the natural environment around them.

Every project is designed to grow, adapt, and support life long after installation.