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The phrase “desert garden” seems an unlikely one. “Garden” calls to mind neat and orderly rows of decorative or edible plants, while deserts are the quintessential wild space, inhospitable expanses of sand and scrub. But cultivating the hardy inhabitants of Texas’ most remote regions makes for beautiful galleries of the strange and otherworldly plants that are suited to survive in these harsh conditions. This month, Texas Parks & Wildlife magazine highlights 5 desert gardens that you can visit.
 Texas Native Plant Lab
Dallas Arboretum
The Dallas Arboretum provides a space for students and visitors to get to know Texas native plants — including those you might usually keep your distance from. A pet project of education director Dustin Miller, the Texas Native Plant Lab is an outdoor classroom where school groups and other visitors can study, touch and experience these plants in new ways.
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 Barton Warnock Visitor Center
Big Bend Ranch State Park
A trip to this 2-acre desert garden might yield Santa Rita prickly pears blushing brilliant fuschia, waxy leafless candelilla, green-barked paloverde trees and more. A majestic gallery of yuccas awaits — Thompson yuccas rub shoulders with Spanish daggers, standing like protective parents over the shorter, stubbier soaptree yuccas. Take a break from the heat and visit the interpretive center.
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 Chihuahuan Desert Gardens
UT - El Paso
The plants that dominate the Chihuahuan Desert are on full display at this certified Texas wildscape site, hosting more than 800 species of plants. Get to know the plants — from spiky sotol to the cuddlier creosote bush to the treacherous tree cholla — that give the Chihuahuan Desert its unique personality, defined by mountain ranges surrounding arid valleys.
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