Submit your Email to receive the On Wisconsin Outdoors Newsletter.

Our Sponsors:

Daves Turf and Marine

Waukesha Truck Accessory store and service, truck bed covers, hitches, latter racks, truck caps

Dick Ellis Blog:
3/25/2024
DICK ELLIS Click here for full PDF Version from the March/April Issue. Seeking Wolf PhotosOWO’s informal census continuesOn Wisconsin Outdoors’ informal wolf census continues. Please send your trail cam photos of wolves in Wisconsin to: wolves@onwisconsinoutdoors.com. List the county where the photos were taken, the date, and verify the number of wolves visible in each photo. Your name will not be published. OWO publishers do not b...
...Read More or Post a Comment Click Here to view all Ellis Blogs

OWO

Waukesha Truck Accessory store and service, truck bed covers, hitches, latter racks, truck caps

Waukesha Truck Accessory store and service, truck bed covers, hitches, latter racks, truck caps

OWO

Waukesha Truck Accessory store and service, truck bed covers, hitches, latter racks, truck caps

OWO

OWO

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO

OWO

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO and Kwik Trip

Bob's Bear Bait

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO

OWO and Kwik Trip

OWO

OWO

Birding report and rarities; whooping crane cam

On Wisconsin Outdoors

Upland sandpipers have returned to southern Wisconsin grasslands after spending the winter nearly 5,000 miles south in Argentina! Photo credit: Ryan Brady

Statewide birding report

In southern Wisconsin, Baltimore orioles and rose-breasted grosbeaks have arrived in numbers, along with a few orchard orioles and ruby-throated hummingbirds. Meanwhile, far northern Wisconsin experienced a significant ice/snow event over the past few days, bringing large numbers of American robins, hermit thrushes, and sparrows to roadsides. Feeders were also extremely active...Read more.

Whooping crane cam and nest update

A pair of whooping cranes has nested for the first time at White River Marsh Wildlife Area, marking a welcome expansion of nesting range in Wisconsin and an important milestone in efforts to establish a self-sustaining population of this rare crane in eastern North America.  Watch the nest via the first ever 24/7 whooping crane cam.  

As reported earlier, another pair of cranes has claimed the crown of the first nest in Wisconsin resulting from a released bird reared by a parent crane in captivity...Read more