Texas Wildflower Day

Did you know?

  • Texas Wildflower Day is an annual celebration of Texas wildflowers on the fourth Saturday of April.
  • It is a wonderful 45-year old tradition that celebrates the beauty, importance, and diversity of Texas wildflowers and promotes conservation efforts.
  • Texas Wildflower Day was started by Texas Woman’s University (TWU) in 1980, with Carroll Abbott (our Society’s founder) being the celebration’s champion. Read his 1978 book titled How to Know and Grow Texas Wildflowers or the Texas Wildflower Newsletter he published from 1976 to 1984.
  • In fact, the first celebration of Texas Wildflower Day at TWU led to the formation of the Native Plant Society of Texas the following year!
Man in a hat sitting behind a cluster of bluebonnets
Carroll Abbott
Texas Landscape Wildflowers in Spring
Texas Landscape Wildflowers in Spring

Celebrate with us!

  • Texas Woman’s University holds a Texas Wildflower Day celebration each year on its campus. Learn more
  • We are continuing our Get on the Map challenge with Homegrown National Park® with a goal of adding more NPSOT native plant gardens to their biodiversity map to celebrate Texas Wildflower Day. How to add your garden to the map.
  • The Society will be sharing Texas wildflower content on our social media channels throughout the month of April to celebrate.
  • We encourage chapters to create special Texas Wildflower Day events such as NICE nursery tours, wildflower identification walks, community wildflower planting events, and educational presentations.

Texas Wildflower Info

  • Our state flower, the Texas Bluebonnet (Lupinus texensis) is also our Society’s logo. There are actually 5 species of Bluebonnet native to Texas, all of which are considered the state flower.
  • There are over 2,700 wildflowers native to Texas. You can find over 200 of them in our Native Plant Database here, and check out The Wildflower Center’s list of Top 20 Texas Wildflowers.
  • Want to head out on a wildflower drive this spring? Take this Texas Department of Transportation brochure with recommended driving routes.
  • The Texas Department of Transportation buys and sows about 30,000 pounds of wildflower seeds each year along more than 800,000 miles of right of way!
  • Read about Ladybird Johnson’s role in blanketing Texas roadsides with wildflowers here.
  • Head out on a wildflower walk and take this Wildflower Bingo with you!
  • Want to learn how to identify wildflowers from their seedlings? This post can help!
A Beautiful Field Blanketed with the Famous Bright Blue Texas Bluebonnet and Bright Orange Indian Paintbrush Wildflowers with Blue Skies, Wooden Fence, and Green Trees.

About the Region

2026 Fall Symposium Logo

This low-elevations region of Texas extends inland from the barrier islands, about 60 or so miles, and stretches from Brownsville to Louisiana. In total, it covers about 9.5 million acres, with a high point of 150 feet in elevation. More than 1000 species of plants can be found in this region. On the southern end, species more common in Mexico (such as Sabal mexicana) and Central America occur.

The barrier islands provide us with dune systems, and clay flats to the inland side, which have species found in these areas alone. Many plants here, such as Ipomoea pes-caprae (beach morning glory), can be found throughout tropical regions of the globe. I’ve encountered the same species on the beaches of Guam.

Once inland, vast marshes and wet prairies occur. Occasionally, oak (Quercus fusiformis) groves can be found. Common grasses include species of Bothriochloa, Paspalum, and Sporobolus; eastern gamagrass (Tripsacum dactyloides); and switchgrass (Panicum species). Many rivers and creeks cut through the Gulf Prairies, and along these riparian areas various species of trees, Sabal minor, and other plants adapted to clay soils can be found. Due to overgrazing, farming, and fire suppression, woody species such as mesquite (Prosopis glandulosa) and huisache (Acacia farnesiana), and invasive species such as chinaberry (Melia azedarach), Brazilian pepper (Schinus terebinthifolius), and Chinese tallow (Sapium sebiferum) have increased and displaced our native flora.

Source: Wildflowers of Texas by Michael Eason