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Tue
25
Jul

Mosquito species capable of transmitting Zika virus found in Dane County not concerning

MADISON—Researchers at the University of Wisconsin Medical Entomology Laboratory and health officials from the Department of Health Services and Public Health Madison-Dane County announced this week that the Aedes albopictus mosquito has been found in Dane County. This is the first documentation of this species of mosquito in Wisconsin. 

Aedes albopictus is one type of mosquito that is capable of spreading Zika virus; however, there is no evidence of Zika-infected mosquitoes in Wisconsin. 

The discovery of Aedes albopictus is unlikely to indicate an elevated risk of locally-transmitted Zika virus in Wisconsin. Zika virus is primarily spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which survives in warmer climates, and has not been found in Wisconsin or any neighboring states. 

Tue
25
Jul

$28k short of bringing Aunt Marianne sculpture to PdC park


The sculpture torso has been covered with the silicon rubber mold material. The bumps embedded in the mold are there to register with the plaster backing which will be applied in sections to keep the mold firm. When this is done and all sections are complete, they will be removed from the clay model and the sections will be ready for receiving the sculpture wax. (Submitted photo)

The life-sized clay sculpture of Aunt Marianne LaBuche, the next statue planned for the Mississippi River Sculpture Park in Prairie du Chien, has been taken to the bronze foundry in Milwaukee.

To achieve the complete foundry processes, along with shipping and insurance, $28,300 is yet needed to bring the Aunt Marianne LaBuche statue to the park. Her arrival is highly anticipated. To donate, visit http://mrspfundraising.blogspot.com or contact the sculpture park committee at Mississippi River Sculpture Park, P.O. Box 395, Prairie du Chien, WI 53821, or mrsppdc@gmail.com.

Mon
24
Jul

Prairie Legion is Statebound


Jon Dyer scores on a squeeze bunt by Drake Coleman in the fourth inning against visiting Viroqua in the regional championship game Sunday afternoon. (Photos by Ted Pennekamp)

Peyton Hall scores in the fourth inning versus Viroqua in the regional title game.

Gavin Greene fires in a pitch in the championship game while Cory Check plays short.

Chas Sagedahl defends at first base against Viroqua.

 

Grasshoppers on a roll, 

excited about state tournament

By Ted Pennekamp

 

Mon
24
Jul

Blues fest marks 20 years with ‘The Voice’ finalist, ZZ Top tribute band


Laith Al-Saadi was a 2016 finalist on TV’s “The Voice.” He will perform Friday, July 28, at 7 p.m., at the Prairie Dog Blues Festival in Prairie du Chien.

Eliminator, a ZZ Top tribute band, will undoubtedly enliven the blues fest crowd with its spot-on reproduction of the classic songs and costumes—beards and all—as well as a show that includes the famous spinning guitars.

By Correne Martin

From the iconic, spinning fuzzy guitars of Eliminator, a ZZ Top tribute band, to the powerful and soulful vocals of Laith Al-Saadi, 2016 “The Voice” finalist, the 20th annual Prairie Dog Blues Festival is a party that won’t disappoint, set for this weekend in Prairie du Chien. In addition, 10 vibrantly stylistic music acts will play the perfect mix of global blues varieties that you’ve come to expect from the blues festival.

This year’s event is Friday, July 28 and Saturday, July 29, on St. Feriole Island. Tickets for one or both days, as well as on-site camping passes, can be purchased at the gate.

Mon
24
Jul

EF1 tornado rips through McGregor, straight line winds leave damage in Prairie du Chien, Bridgeport


McGregor’s Main Street Mall Antiques building (center) collapsed in the tornado, its top level resting where the ground floor had once been. To the left is the once three-story building that housed INKspiration Tattoo. These were among the hardest hit areas in downtown McGregor. (Photo by Audrey Posten)

Darryl Buffington and Kathy Lange clean up and pick through their items kept inside storage units, owned by Cleary Building/CT Investments in Bridgeport, that exploded due to what the National Weather Service is calling straight line winds in Prairie du Chien, Wednesday evening, July 19. (Photo by Gary Howe)

Three docks at the Campion Street Boat Landing in Prairie du Chien were flipped during Wednesday evening’s storm. (Photo by Gary Howe)

At D&J Toppers & RV, three campers, a few wrecked toppers and a cargo trailer—which blew over the Crossing Rivers Health employee entrance roadway—were totaled. The hospital itself sustained no damage, though it was on lockdown during the storm. (Photo by Gary Howe)

The 100-year-old building, where INKspiration was most recently located, was obliterated by the tornado in McGregor. The structure and its debris were completely removed by Clayton County Recycling over the weekend. (Photo by Audrey Posten)

Power lines were laid down along Highway 27 between Prairie du Chien and Eastman, near Limery Road. Power outages were an enormous problem in the aftermath of Wednesday’s storm. A large portion of Crawford County residents were still without power by noon Friday. (Photo by Correne Martin)

This was a photo shared on Facebook, from a Bridgeport resident who lost their trampoline due to the winds.

This vehicle, in the MPC parking lot, was among many damaged area wide. It appeared that the SUV was lifted off the ground, while some aluminum from the destroyed storage units in Bridgport blew underneath. (Photo by Correne Martin)

Frank Weeks, of Prairie du Chien, surveys the damage done to his prize possession, a WWII defender, when three hangars at the Prairie du Chien Municipal Airport were pummeled in last week’s chaos. Weeks has owned the aircraft for over 50 years. (Inset) The plane before the storm wreaked havoc on it. (Photo by Gary Howe)

Inmates at the Prairie du Chien Correctional Institution cleaned up around its Prairie du Chien facility and assisted around the community. (Photo by Ted Pennekamp)

This house on Parrish Street near the Prairie du Chien Correctional Institution was among several that ended up with a large tree falling upon it amid the storm. (Photo by Ted Pennekamp)

Trees also fell on railroad tracks in the area, halting trains attempting to make their way through Prairie du Chien Thursday, until they could be cleared. (Photo by Ted Pennekamp)

This enormous pine snapped and fell onto a boat on South First Street in Prairie du Chien. (Photo by Ted Pennekamp)

The boat docks utilized by private owners Doc Holidays were damaged by the winds. (Photo by Ted Pennekamp)

An Amish farmer assesses the ruins of his greenhouse in Bridgeport, near the intersection of Marquette and Vineyard Coulee roads. The entire outer shell of the greenhouse was ripped off, shredded and strewn across the vicinity. (Photo by Correne Martin)

This downed tree between Jones' Black Angus and the Bridgeport Inn blocked the roadway between the two facilities. (Photo by Correne Martin)

Rubble was strewn all over MPC's parking lot, the majority of which came from the ruined storage sheds owned by Cleary Building/CT Investments. (Photo by Correne Martin)

More debris near MPC. (Photo by Gary Howe)

A number of play sets in people's yards were whipped around in the storm. (Photo by Correne Martin)

Hardly any section of the Prairie du Chien community was left untouched. This sign is located along Marquette Road in Bridgeport. Also pictured, one of the city’s trucks carries broken tree limbs to the city’s brush and compost site. (Photo by Correne Martin)

This broken stoplight laid at the intersection of Marquette Road and Vineyard Coulee Road Thursday. (Photo by Correne Martin)

The items stored inside the Bridgeport storage sheds that were destroyed remained still in their same square footage, even though the structure was lifted up and thrown some distance away. (Photo by Gary Howe)

This tree was bent down across the city of Prairie du Chien street at Beaumont Road. (Photo by Gary Howe)

The roots of this big, old tree gave way to the wind speeds, toppling the tree onto a house in the center of Prairie du Chien. (Photo by Gary Howe)

By Correne Martin, Audrey Posten and Ted Pennekamp

A confirmed EF1 tornado, with winds up to 110 mph, ripped through the small, historical river town of McGregor, Wednesday, July 19, around 6:15 p.m., devastating buildings, snapping trees and blowing debris, as it severely changed the community’s downtown landscape indefinitely. No one was killed in the storm, though one man died during clean-up efforts on his own farm, according to Clayton County authorities.

Once the storm, which included plenty of hard-driving rain too, ravaged McGregor, it crossed the Mississippi River into the south end of Prairie du Chien, at the boundary with Bridgeport. There, weaker straight line winds, as National Weather Service officials are saying, wiped out more structures, tipped campers and left behind days’ worth of damage to clear for businesses and residents.

Sat
22
Jul

Rains cause Kickapoo River to flood, river now receding


The sandbag wall around Jo's Kountry Bar in Steuben held back the water fairly well. Pumping was being done continuously and the bar was open. (Photos by Ted Pennekamp)

The playground at Steuben was under water on Saturday.

The Kickapoo River goes over the bridge at Steuben on Saturday.

A house in Gays Mills was surrounded by water.

Much of Gays Mills was flooded.

This view from an overlook shows downtown Gays Mills.

The park in Soldiers Grove was flooded.

Roads near the park in Soldiers Grove were closed.

By Ted Pennekamp

 

The severe thunder storm that brought an EF1 tornado, high winds and heavy rain to Crawford County on Wednesday evening is also partially to blame for the flooding of the Kickapoo River. 

Thu
20
Jul

Betty Rodgers

Betty I. Rodgers, age 88, of rural Patch Grove, went home to be with the Lord on Tuesday, July 18, 2017, at Grant Regional Health Center, Lancaster, after over two years of grace following strokes, mini-strokes, and a final brief illness.

Wed
19
Jul

Bird Survey, Forest Inventory


For the past several years, bird researcher Jon Stravers has been boating and trekking into hard-to-reach areas to document clusters of cerulean warblers, neo-tropical migrants which inhabit the bluffs and ravines near the Upper Mississippi River for approximately three months each year. “I love this place,” said Stravers. (Photo by Ted Pennekamp)

Cerulean warblers are good indicators that species such as peregrine falcons and red-shouldered hawks, as well as various neo-tropical migrants, are also abundant in the area. (Photo by Kat Busse)

Intern Nate Vogt (left), biologist Billy Reiter-Marolf and intern Melissa Blasky work on the forest inventory in Sny Magill. (Photo by Dan Phillips Jr.)

 

Bird survey, forest inventory may shape 

habitat management actions in areas of Pool 10

By Ted Pennekamp

 

Wed
19
Jul

Long Spurs believe landowner appreciation is important to continued quality hunting


Some of the members of the Bluff Country Long Spurs NWTF chapter gathered for a photo at Landowners Appreciation Day. From left are Matt Davis, Mike Skaife, Bob Irvine, Mike Cross, Mike Hazen, Chad Gruber, Rich Noel and Bob Ziel. (Submitted photos)

Landowners Appreciation Day is time for private property owners and their families to enjoy spending time with one another and be thanked for their contributions to hunting in Wisconsin.

A sawdust pile filled with coins gives the kids attending something to enjoy while their parents are socializing.

By Correne Martin

For 27 years, the Bluff Country Long Spurs have hosted Landowners Appreciation Day in Prairie du Chien the Sunday after Father’s Day. It’s one of five events of its kind held across the state to say thank you to private property owners for allowing hunters to utilize their fields and wooded areas without charge.

“It’s one of those great days. The landowners say they appreciate it,” said Bob Ziel, the chapter’s appreciation day chair. “They don’t see each other through the year so it’s a chance to sit and talk.”

The first year, in 1990, there were 150 people and, at one point, the occasion drew just shy of 600 people. Yet, in more recent years, about 240 landowners and family members have attended the local gathering.

Wed
19
Jul

City of PdC to negotiate with DOT for surplus land near wastewater treatment plant

By Correne Martin

The Prairie du Chien Common Council has decided to enter negotiations with the Wisconsin Department of Transportation for a small piece of surplus DOT land that remained after the Highway 18 Bypass project years ago.

The land in consideration includes a section bounded by the city’s wastewater treatment plant, Lockwood Street, the Wisconsin & Southern Railroad tracks and campground property, as the council discussed Tuesday night.
“There’s some additional land there and the council wishes to negotiate with the DOT to see if they can agree on a plan that might be beneficial to the city,” noted City Administrator Art Osten.

No specific plans for that property have been released.

Brunson/Fowler alleys flooding
When heavy rains occur in Prairie du Chien, flooding has tended to be an issue in the area of Brunson and Fowler Streets, where they intersect with 9th and 10th Streets.

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