Lupinus argenteus, Silvery Lupine


Artist: Sarah Red-Laird

Title: Bee Habitat in Cyanotype 41

Location: Anderson Ranch, Montana

Project: Buzz on the Range

Flower: Lupinus argenteus, Silvery Lupine

Materials: Cyanotype, barnwood

Field Season: 2023

Composed: 2023


This project is a collaboration with Western Sustainability Exchange that attempts to demonstrate, with our producer partners as the focus, alternative practices to promote healthy bee populations. We are working in southwestern Montana’s Paradise Valley to support a coalition of five ranchers on 8,900 acres of range.  In this project we aim to find innovative ways to establish nectar and pollen producing flowers through facilitating endozoochory (dispersion of seed through ruminant dung (aka COW POO!!)) and utilizing rotational, adaptive grazing.

There is an urgent need for resilient soil, grass, and bee habitat in our rangelands. Though most of the folks that we work with love planting for bees simply because it’s fun, interesting, and the right thing to do – in order for this to be scalable, it can only be achieved through fiscally viable approaches. The Buzz on the Range project attempts to demonstrate, with ranchers as the focus (supported by BGO, MSU, and WSE), alternative practices to promote healthy bee populations, while also improving pasture plant diversity and healthy cows. 


BGO is proud to support the ranchers by monitoring bee communities and flower growth, advising on seed mixes and dispersal methods, and will assist in educational material creation and teaching workshops at the conclusion of the project (once we figure out what methods and mixes work well).


Silvery lupine isn’t part of our seed mix, but I love that it is a staple on the Anderson Ranch. It’s, in-fact toxic to livestock. However, there are so many other plants that are attractive to cows, they are not interested in eating it.

Silvery lupine is an important native plant, highly attractive to bumble bees and bumble bees. It’s a cold tolerant plant that comes out early in the spring, just like bumble bees!