The online sale is March 16 (noon) to March 19 (noon) – order and pay online; pick up on March 29 at our in-person sale.
The in-person sale is March 29 (11am-2pm)– at Southwest Williamson County Regional Park, Leander, TX.
If we update information on the 2025 Spring Native Plant Sale page, we’ll publish a new blog post. (Click on Get News if you would like to subscribe to the blog.)
IMPORTANT: The 2025 Spring Native Plant Sale page at the button above is where we’ll publish details about both sales, including:
lists of the plants anticipated to be in each sale,
the link to the online store,
ordering and pick up instructions for the online sale.
If we update information on the 2025 Spring Native Plant Sale page, we’ll publish a new blog post. (Click on Get News if you would like to subscribe to the blog.)
We sell only Texas native plants!
Williamson County Southwest Regional Park, Nov 2, 2024. Photo by Cindy Chrisler.
The plant availability list with descriptions has been updated. Plants which have been dropped from the inventory are still listed but with lines through them.
The sale is Saturday, November 2, 2024, at Southwest Williamson County Regional Park, 3005 County Road 175, Leander, TX 78641. We will be in the pavilions (Boulder East and Boulder West) near the Quarry Splash Pad. Sale hours will be from 11:00 AM – 2 PM or until we run out of plants.
Of primary interest to some folks:
There will be several Cotinus obovata (American Smoke Tree) in 3/5 gallon size available.
New to the list of Monarch Butterfly larval plants, we will have Mateleabiflora (Purple Milkweed Vine) from Williamson County rescue parent plants.
Funastrum cynanchoides (Climbing Milkweed Vine) is now on the list.
Lonicera albiflora (White Bush Honeysuckle) has been added. These plants are the offspring of Williamson County rescue plants. It has been many years since we have offered this plant.
Hope to see you at the sale Saturday starting at 11 AM.
We only sell Texas native plants, and we try to make sure everything we sell is well-adapted to grow in Williamson County.
We publish news about the sale in blog posts. Subscribe to receive email when a post is published. Click on Get News.
White Mistflower, Ageratina havanensis. Photo by Greg Donica.