By Montana Max, Local Sasquatch & Horticultural Enthusiast
Listen here.
I’ve been roaming these Montana mountains longer than I care to admit. Let’s just say I remember when the Ice Age was “current events.” Over the years, I’ve dodged trail cameras, left perfectly confusing footprints, and mastered my “rustle and vanish” technique.
But here’s the thing.
Montana isn’t just wild country. Sometimes the most powerful places are the ones humans plant on purpose.
And when you spend most of your life hiding behind Douglas firs and eating huckleberries, you learn to respect good landscaping.
Plus, gardens are the only places where a seven-foot-tall hairy fellow can pass for an overgrown juniper.
So grab your walking stick. I carved mine from a lightning-struck lodgepole pine back in 1887. Let’s take a slow walk through Montana’s most fascinating gardens and sculpture parks.
I promise to keep the footprints to a minimum.
Garden of One Thousand Buddhas in Arlee, Montana
Location: Arlee, Jocko Valley
Admission: Free (donations welcome)
Open: Daily, dawn to dusk
Now I’ll be honest.
When I first heard about a thousand Buddha statues in Arlee, I thought, “Great. A thousand peaceful eyes staring at me.”
But the Garden of One Thousand Buddhas surprised me.
It was founded by Gochen Tulku Sang-ngag Rinpoche. He survived nine to ten years of imprisonment during the Chinese Cultural Revolution for practicing Buddhism. When his prayer beads were taken, he counted mantras with knotted string.
That kind of resilience humbles even a sasquatch.
Later, after escaping through the Himalayas, he came to Montana. He chose the Jocko Valley because he believed it resembled a lotus flower shape from childhood visions.
Now that’s vision.
Sacred Layout in Big Sky Country
The garden is shaped like a Dharmachakra, or Wheel of Dharma. At the center stands a 24–25 foot statue of Yum Chenmo, the Great Mother.
From her, eight spokes extend outward. Along those paths sit 1,000 hand-cast white Buddha statues.
It’s peaceful. Symmetrical. Quiet.
However, the circular design offers zero hiding spots. So visit off-hours if you’re hairy.
Weapons Buried for Peace
Here’s something powerful.
Underneath the statues, destroyed weapons were buried. Guns. Swords. Tools of violence.
They now serve as a foundation for compassion.
That’s transformation.
I tried meditating there once. Lasted seven minutes before a chipmunk ran over my foot and I yelped like a startled elk.
Enlightenment takes practice.

Tizer Botanic Gardens in Jefferson City
Location: Jefferson City, Elkhorn Mountains
Established: 1997
Accreditation: International Level II Arboretum
If the Buddha Garden is peaceful, Tizer is playful.
Founded by Richard Krott and Belva Lotzer in 1997, the garden began during Richard’s battle with cancer. What started as therapy grew into Montana’s only full-time botanical garden.
It now features:
- 1,500 varieties of perennials
- 450 types of conifers
- Rare plants from Siberia, Turkistan, and South Africa
- Seven acres along Prickly Pear Creek
And yes, it holds international Level II arboretum accreditation.
That’s serious plant business.
The Living Tool Shed
There’s a shed completely overtaken by plants. Vines, moss, flowers — the whole building became part of the forest.
I have never related to architecture more.
It’s artfully overgrown. Not “sasquatch shelter messy.” There’s a difference.
Whimsy Everywhere
Tizer also features:
- Upside-down trees
- Fairy and gnome gardens
- Sculpted tree faces
- Seasonal High Tea events
Yes. High Tea. In Montana.
Watching folks sip from fine china with the Elkhorns behind them is something else.
Meanwhile, I tried recreating it with elderflower tea and a chipped mug. A magpie judged me harshly.
Blackfoot Pathways: Sculpture in the Wild, Lincoln
Location: Lincoln
Size: 26 acres
Open: Dawn to dusk
Now this one hits deeper.
Blackfoot Pathways preserves Montana’s timber history through sculpture. At the center stands a restored TeePee Burner, once used to burn sawmill waste.
Back in the 1950s and ’60s, these burners lit the night sky across Montana.
I remember them glowing from ridgelines.
The Memory Glow Project
Artist Kevin O’Dwyer recreated that glow using solar power and LED light. Each evening, the burner lights up again.
It doesn’t burn.
It remembers.
Inside, steel plates display historic logging photographs. Walking inside feels like stepping into a cathedral of Montana industry.
It made even me reflect.
And I’ve seen a lot.
Archie Bray Foundation in Helena
Location: Helena
National Register of Historic Places
26 acres of former clay works
The Bray is an open-air ceramic art center.
Hundreds of ceramic sculptures sit across the property. Some crack. Some fade. Some look broken.
That’s the point.
The Potter’s Shrine
Built between 1985–1987 by Robert Harrison, the Potter’s Shrine was made from discarded brick and ceramic scraps from the old Western Clay Manufacturing Company.
Inside sits a bust of Archie Bray.
The shrine honors art made without financial stress. Just creativity.
That philosophy? I respect it.
Also, the beehive kilns on site are stunning. Massive brick domes that once fired clay now echo with wind and quiet.
I hummed inside one once.
It sounded like a cathedral.
Gatiss Gardens in Creston
Location: Creston, Flathead Valley
Size: 5 acres
Admission: Free (donations welcome)
Now this one is gentle.
Gatiss Gardens features hardy English perennial varieties brought from a family homestead before 1898.
That means some plant lines have been growing for over 125 years.
In Montana’s Zone 4 climate.
That’s grit.
English Cottage Meets Montana Tough
You’ll find:
- Delphiniums
- Foxgloves
- Roses
- Campanula
- Heritage American additions
It’s a quiet botanical sanctuary.
No big sculptures. No spectacle.
Just roots.
I sat there for two hours once, watching families walk slowly between blooms.
Sometimes quiet beauty hits hardest.
Ohrmann Museum & Gallery in Drummond
Location: Highway 1, Drummond
Admission: Free
Sign reads: “Usually Open”
Bill Ohrmann started welding steel animal sculptures at age 79.
Seventy-nine.
He created mammoths, polar bears, and even a dodo bird.
Inside each animal?
A small metal heart.
No one had to know.
But he put one there anyway.
That detail nearly did me in.
The sign invites visitors to “think your own thoughts crackpot tho they might well be.”
I wrote that down.
Think your crackpot thoughts.
Build your mammoth anyway.
Tippet Rise Art Center in Fishtail
Location: Fishtail
Size: 12,500 acres
Access: Ticketed tours and events
Tippet Rise blends large-scale sculpture, classical music, and Montana ranch land.
Massive steel and stone works sit across rolling prairie.
Concerts echo through the hills.
It’s art that changes how you see land itself.
And for once, I feel small there.
That’s humbling.
Frequently Asked Questions About Montana Gardens
What is the most peaceful garden in Montana?
The Garden of One Thousand Buddhas in Arlee offers spiritual reflection and sacred design.
What is Montana’s only full-time botanical garden?
Tizer Botanic Gardens in Jefferson City.
Are any Montana gardens free?
Yes. Garden of One Thousand Buddhas, Blackfoot Pathways, Archie Bray grounds, Gatiss Gardens, and Ohrmann Museum are free.
Where can I see large outdoor sculptures in Montana?
Visit Blackfoot Pathways (Lincoln), Ohrmann Museum (Drummond), and Tippet Rise (Fishtail).
When is the best time to visit Montana gardens?
Late spring through early fall offers peak blooms and accessible weather.
Final Thoughts from a Furry Philosopher
From Buddha statues to steel mammoths, Montana grows more than wheat and pine trees.
It grows memory. Art. Meaning.
And maybe that’s the deepest kind of gardening.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got a mammoth to stand next to for no reason at all.
Keep your eyes on the tree line.
— Montana Max
SOURCES:
Garden of One Thousand Buddhas (Arlee)
- Official Ewam Garden Overview: https://ewam.org/centers/ewam-usa/buddha-garden
- Narrative and Symbolism Deep Dive (Tricycle Magazine): https://tricycle.org/article/garden-of-one-thousand-buddhas/
- History of Construction and Prophecy (Northwest Dharma): https://northwestdharma.org/buddhawheel/
- Gochen Tulku Sang-ngag Rinpoche’s Background (Glacier Country): https://blog.glaciermt.com/western-montana-spotlight-khen-rinpoche/
- Design and Statuary Technical Details (Wikipedia):(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_of_One_Thousand_Buddhas)
Tizer Botanic Gardens & Arboretum (Jefferson City)
- Official Website: https://tizergardens.com/
- Accreditation and Botanical Collections (ArbNet): https://arbnet.org/morton-register/tizer-botanic-gardens-arboretum/
- Overview of Unique Features and “Living Tool Shed” (Southwest Montana): https://southwestmt.com/blog/tizer-gardens-a-southwest-montana-paradise/
- High Tea and Visitor Experiences (Southwest Montana): https://southwestmt.com/blog/a-unique-high-tea-experience-at-montanas-tizer-gardens/
Blackfoot Pathways: Sculpture in the Wild (Lincoln)
- Official Website: http://www.sculptureinthewild.com/
- The Delaney Sawmill TeePee Burner Re-imagining (Artist Kevin O’Dwyer): https://www.kevin-j-odwyer.com/montana-memory–re-imagining-delaney-teepee-burner.html
- Park History and Community Impact (Big Sky Journal): https://bigskyjournal.com/blackfoot-pathways-sculpture-in-the-wild/
Archie Bray Foundation (Helena)
- Official History and Mission: https://archiebray.org/about/
- The Ceramics Residency and Site Context (Atlas Obscura): https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/archie-bray-foundation-ceramics-residency
- The Story of “A Potter’s Shrine” (Robert Harrison): https://robertharrison.co/robert-harrison-shrines-for-potters/
Gatiss Gardens (Creston)
- Official Website: https://gatissgardens.com/
- History of the 1898 English Homestead Perennials (XL Country): https://xlcountry.com/botanical-gardens-montana/
Ohrmann Museum & Gallery (Drummond)
- Artist Profile and Metal Menagerie (Atlas Obscura): https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/ohrmann-museum
- Bill Ohrmann Biography and the “Secret Hearts” (WilderUtopia): https://wilderutopia.com/landscape/urban-art/art-of-bill-ohrmann-gentle-rancher-voice-for-the-wild/
Tippet Rise Art Center (Fishtail)
- Official Background and Co-founders: https://tippetrise.org/about
- Outdoor Sculpture and Landscape Integration (Edible Bozeman): https://ediblebozeman.com/features/monumental-moments-a-journey-to-tippet-rise-art-center/
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And don’t forget to roam through our blog, where Montana Max dishes out tales from the trail, cultural deep-dives, and a whole lotta backwoods wisdom.


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