Inside this edition
Vortex Optics opens new training facility
Brewhaha, SGAAC team up for fundraiser
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Spring Green, Wisconsin
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FLOW volunteers clean-up island near Arena
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Wednesday, March 24, 2021 Vol. 2, No. 12 Free, Single-Copy
American Players Theatre announces six-play 2021 season
American Players Theatre American Players Theatre (APT) is thrilled to announce its projected 2021 Summer Season. The schedule is set to include six plays, with one production playing at a time in the Hill and Touchstone Theatres. The first two plays will be the world-premiere staging of James DeVita’s An Improbable Fiction in the Hill Theatre, and Katori Hall’s The Mountain-
top in the Touchstone Theatre. Next up will be Tom Stoppard’s Rough Crossing (Hill) and a remount of An Iliad (Touchstone), Lisa Peterson and Denis O’Hare’s adaptation of Homer’s The Iliad. The third pair will be an adaption of William Shakespeare’s Cymbeline by Henry Woronicz (Hill) and Christopher Fry’s A Phoenix Too Frequent (Touchstone), which was originally slated for the 2020 sea-
son. APT also expects to announce three more productions in the coming months that will play in fall and winter. Artistic Director Brenda DeVita said, “We are so incredibly grateful that the world is moving in the right direction and we are able to be working on these stories for our audience. Just thinking about being back in our theaters – on our Hill – after the year
we’ve had, is such a relief. We can hardly contain our excitement! The past year we were doing everything in our power just to stay connected to each other, and find some hope, some joy and some inspiration. And now to be contemplating being together in person?!! So we have a wonderful, original season planned. And, to be honest it will be a little weird that our
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Prescribed burns dot the landscape, Valley reaps ecological benefits Taylor Scott, Managing Editor
Two minor wildfires burn less than an acre in Spring Green, DNR reminds that a majority of wildfires happen in spring Spring is here and with it brings an increasing risk of wildfires, with two small wildfires burning a combined 0.30 acres in Spring Green over the weekend. On Saturday alone, there were 36 fires burning over 100 acres across the state, according to the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR). Five structures were burned and several more were threatened. None of those structures were in the Spring Green area. The DNR reports that, so far this year, 47% of wildfires were caused by debris burning, the leading cause of Wisconsin’s wildfires. Wildfires can happen just about any time of the year, but historically, 60% of all annual wildfires in Wisconsin occur in March, April and May alone. The first wildfire occurred on Saturday afternoon at a residential address on Jones Road. The fire was “caused by the owner working in his yard cutting metal fence parts up with a grinding wheel,” said Scott Lancaster, local forester-ranger for the DNR. “Sparks ignited dry grass in his yard, spread rapidly, was contained on his property and suppressed by Spring Green Fire Department.” The Jones Road fire was contained to 0.10 acres, according to the DNR. The second wildfire occurred along Big Hollow Road on Sunday. It was caused “by high winds pushing a dead tree over onto electric transmission lines, sparking to the ground, and igniting the dry grass along the road. This fire was actioned quickly and contained to the powerline right-of-way and a few tree rows on the edge of pine for-
Photo by Emily Mills/The Nature Conservancy The flames of a prescribed fire rush up the side of the dry bluff prairie at the Spring Green Prairie preserve. Staff created fire breaks along each side of the burn to make sure the flames wouldn’t spread to the woods above. est,” said Lancaster. “This fire just burned surface vegetation of grass, shrubs and pine needles and not entire trees. This fire was contained to 0.20 acres and suppressed by DNR and Spring Green Fire Department.” Both wildfires were coincidentally close to prescribed burns that occurred in the Spring Green Preserve over the weekend. “Neither wildland fires were related to
the recent prescribed burning. While close in proximity, each wildfire was caused by unrelated events,” said Lancaster. “The primary purpose for prescribed burns is for ecological benefit to reduce invasive species, allowing native plants to grow and sustain themselves and keep those types of ecosystems going,” said Ralph Sheffer, forest ranger for the DNR. “That also does
allow for fire prevention in that if there is another fire in that area if it gets to those spots that have been burned, essentially they run out of fuel to burn, or there’s less fuel there. So the fire behavior at that time, when it hits that, is greatly reduced and much easier to control.”
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ATV routes growing and changing in counties, surrounding municipalities Nicole Aimone, Editor-in-Chief Routes for ATV/UTV’s in Sauk and Iowa counties have been expanding in recent months, with counties and surrounding municipalities choosing to expand routes or secure funding to up-keep routes for the use of recreation vehicles. At the March 16 Sauk County Board meeting, the board approved various expansions to ATV/UTV routes throughout the county, after local recreation clubs submitted petitions for the addition. Additional routes throughout Sauk County include: 7.2 miles on County Highway (CTH) PF from CTH C to Church Road, 1.2 miles on CTH PF
from Hemlock Road to Leland Road in Honey Creek, 2.09 miles on CTH PF from CTH D to Skyview Road in Honey Creek, 2.4 miles on CTH O from Troy Road to Skunk Valley Road in Troy, one mile on CTH G from Highway 23 to just past West Prairie View Road in Spring Green, and 2.14 miles on White Mound Drive from CTH GG to Lake Road in Bear Creek. The expansions include trails in Reedsburg, Delton and Prairie du Sac. ATV/UTV use on county roads has been an on-going discussion throughout Sauk County, with the board originally rejecting petitions to open county roads in 2019, citing safety
concerns and a state loophole that allows drunk driving offenders to operate UTV/ATV with a clean record for that vehicle. At the March 16 meeting, two supervisors spoke against the route additions, with Supervisor Michelle Buschweiler, who represents Baraboo and portions of Freedom, North Freedom and Excelsior, voting against the motion, citing traffic and safety concerns on routes added on CTH H near Delton and Winfield. “I know at least for County Highway H, there is a plan, because there are so many crashes on that road, to add rumble strips on center and sidelines, I’m wondering if it’s a real good idea
to add an intersection crossing at this time,” said Buschweiler. Highway Commission Patrick Gavinski said the department and Highway committee did originally share similar concerns for the two routes already on CTH H, but have not seen any incidents or concerns with ATV/UTVs on the road. Gavinski said he believes that is because the road does have four foot, paved shoulders. Supervisor Thomas Dorner, of Baraboo, echoed similar concerns but did vote in favor of the routes. Supervisor Shane Gibson, of Baraboo, questioned if Gavinski had
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