In spring, the Pink Evening Primrose is evident up and down the roads of Texas, and often in the vacant lots in the cities. It is an easy plant, native to prairies and open woodlands throughout Texas. It behaves a bit differently according to its location. Generally speaking, it is ever-blooming, as long as it gets water. It goes dormant with freezing temperatures or from lack of water. We suggest that you plant Pink Evening Primrose in a lawn or prairie setting. It colonizes by rhizomes, so you wouldn't want it in your bordered flowerbed. Plant it with Prairie Verbena for a spring-time show you won't soon forget! Blooms from February through July. Reaches a height of 1-3ft tall. Texas Native.