Customer Garden: An English-Inspired Wildscape Garden In Northern Texas
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Feb 20, 2014 · Revised on Oct 7, 2025
Knowing your location helps us recommend plants that will thrive in your climate, based on your Growing Zone.
Posted By High Country Gardens Content Team on Feb 20, 2014 · Revised on Oct 7, 2025


An English garden with a Texas twist: Learn how our customer, Rajesh J., transformed his yard in the the Dallas/Fort Worth area of Texas. He removed his water-intense Bermuda grass lawn and replaced it with a breathtaking waterwise perennial garden. We interviwed him for details!
I call it an English garden with a Texas twist. I would estimate it’s around 1000 square feet, about 80 feet long by 12-to-15 feet deep.
In the Dallas/Fort Worth area, most people just have huge lawns — Bermuda grass or St. Augustine grass. They use sprinklers. My water bills were a lot higher than my neighbors, so I decided to cut down on the water usage. I happened to stumble upon your website and picked up a few ideas there. Most of the plants are from High Country Gardens.


Invest in good soil. We have clay here; people call it ‘black gumbo.’ It is highly alkaline. None of the plants would have survived if I hadn’t amended the soil. It’s a one-time investment. Follow good practices.
Second, learn about the plants before planting them. I lost a lot of plants that looked good in catalogs but weren’t suited for the conditions here.

I wouldn’t put in a lawn to start with. I should have just started with getting good soil and began from there. Instead of a regular sprinkler system, I would have put in a drip irrigation system at the start.
This is what I’d do in hindsight. As it was, I had to kill the grass that was there. I don’t like to use chemicals, but Bermuda grass is hard to kill, so I had to use Roundup, three times. The best time to do it is when it is growing.
The first year, all my plants were from High Country Gardens; they were premium plants in 5-inch pots. I expected magic to happen, but some did not grow more than 10 inches that first year. I remember calling one of the HCG agents to ask, “What am I doing wrong?” She told me that I need to remember that perennials take some time — first they sleep, then they creep, and then they leap. That’s what happened the third year — they came together. So you have to be patient.



Agastache is my favorite –I just like it because it is low maintenance, the hummingbirds love it, and the rabbits don’t eat it. My second favorite is Penstemon. I also like Salvia (Sage) and Ornamental Oreganos, because they are low maintenance and easy to grow.
The other thing I find satisfying and interesting and look forward to are the random plants that just start happening. For instance, the Salvia farinacea that is in the middle of the garden — I did not buy it and I did not plant it.
The same goes with one of the Agastaches. It showed up last year and I let it grow. It bloomed this year. Something crossed with it, similar to the ‘Desert Sunrise’ that I planted. It is pinker and has a different smell to it, with a hint of turpentine. The rabbits don’t bother it.
The biggest benefit I see is a lot of wildlife activity. Before I did this I never saw a hummingbird. Now they hang out nine months of the year and only go home for the winter.
We’ve got birds, bees, toads, frogs, an occasional snake or two, and lots of bunnies. At first, I would plant things that would be gone the next day, so I would look for rabbit resistant plants. Everything I plant is rabbit resistant or has a fragrance or smell that rabbits don’t like.
My backyard is shaded, so I have to follow a totally different strategy there, but overall, I try to use less pesticide and more organic fertilizer and create a better environment.
The Texas Parks & Wildlife Department has designated my yard as a certified backyard wildlife habitat. The program is affiliated with the National Wildlife Federation, where people can fill out paperwork, send photos in and get Texas Wildscape Certification.

Shown here, loosely from left to right: pink and purple Salvia (Sage), Chilopsis (shrub near the path), light blue Russian Sage (Perovskia), yellow Columbine (Aquilegia), orange Butterfly Weed (Asclepias), spiky orange Kniphofia (Red Hot Poker), pink Echinacea (Purple Coneflower), yellow Coreopsis, purple Nepeta (Catmint), Nasella Silky Thread Grass. See below for a detail of the far end of the garden.

Shown here, loosely left to right: pink Salvia (Sage), purple Balloon Flower, purple Nepeta (Catmint), yellow Yarrow (Achillea), pink Penstemon, light blue Russian Sage (Perovskia), tall red Hesperaloe (Texas Yucca), tall white Gaura, coral Gladiolus. See Rajesh's full plant list below!
Ornamental Grasses:
There are several annuals and perennial bulbs under-planted in the garden as well:
Interview Conducted and Edited by Wendy Hatoum for High Country Gardens. © All articles are copyrighted by High Country Gardens.