Wisconsin
Varied bunting spotted in Grafton, first documented sighting in Wisconsin history
GRAFTON – Birds were active about 6:35 a.m. Saturday as Bob Dohr of Pewaukee walked on a gravelly path atop the bluff at Lion’s Den Gorge Nature Preserve in Grafton.
A pair of northern cardinals, the brilliant red male and the tawny female, foraged near the trail. And nearby a smaller, darker bird but with a cardinal-like shape also showed.
Dohr, a Journal Sentinel editor, raised his camera and captured some images.
The three birds were close enough for Dohr, an enthusiastic amateur birder and photographer, to compare and contrast.
“I thought (the darker bird) might be a melanistic cardinal,” Dohr said, referencing an animal with darker than normal pigmentation. “But the size wasn’t right so I really didn’t know.”
Dohr continued his hike. But it didn’t take long for the identity of the mystery bird to be revealed.
And boy was it different.
Within minutes expert birders Alex Mann of Port Washington and Braden Meyer of Grafton came along the same trail and stopped when they saw a streak of blue among the greening foliage.
What they at first thought could be an indigo bunting, a bright blue songbird that nests in Wisconsin, turned out to be a close (genetically) but distant (geographically) relative.
The men scrutinized images of the bird on their cameras, shook their heads at the improbability of the evidence but had no doubt what they were seeing.
It was a varied bunting, a species mostly found in Mexico.
And one that until Saturday had not been documented in Wisconsin.
Mann posted the find at 7:11 a.m. on social media sites.
As word spread a happy shiver went through the Wisconsin birding community. Dozens placed Lion’s Den Gorge in their digital mapping apps and hurried to the scenic park on the Lake Michigan shore in Ozaukee County.
The sighting was confirmed as the state’s first record of the species, said Mark Korducki of the Wisconsin Society for Ornithology. The organization is the official keeper of state bird records.
Moreover, it is the farthest north the species has ever been documented, according to eBird, an online bird reporting system run by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Only two other varied bunting sightings, one along Lake Erie in southern Ontario and one in Pennsylvania, have been recorded in eastern North America.
The varied bunting sighted in Wisconsin was likely blown north and west by the strong winds and weather systems in recent weeks, said Tom Prestby, Audubon conservation manager who lives in Green Bay.
When it got near Lake Michigan, it chose to drop down into the habitat provided by Lion’s Den Gorge rather than be pushed over the watery expanse of the lake.
The breeding range of the varied bunting is predominantly in the deserts of Mexico but extends slightly into Arizona, New Mexico and Texas, according to Cornell. The species prefers desert thorn forests, stream thickets, scrubby woodlands and overgrown clearings. It seldom visits feeders, avoids populated areas and feeds mostly on insects.
Adult male varied buntings are a “stunning mosaic of rich plum, crimson, cherry red, and lavender-violet,” according to the Cornell description. Female and immature varied buntings are brownish.
In its native habitat, birders hoping to see a varied bunting are advised to walk through scrubby stream corridors, listening for singing males and watching for movement low in the brush. Early morning or late afternoon are the best times.
Fortunately for Wisconsin birders, the first-known varied bunting in their state chose to frequent a group of trees and shrubs along a trail in a public park.
At 12:30 p.m. Saturday, a group of 20 gathered on the trail and looked east into the budding foliage atop the bluff where the bird had last been seen.
Fog hung in the air but wasn’t so thick as to obscure birds flitting in the trees and hopping along the ground.
Species seen included a blue-gray gnatcatcher, blue jay and black-throated blue warbler.
But the varied bunting proved elusive for the group until 12:45 when Tom Prestby of Green Bay spotted it.
Over the next 45 seconds, the bird gave good looks as it flew on short sorties to grab midges then return to a perch on a branch. It then continued its feeding but dropped out of sight.
Until about 1:15 it would disappear briefly then show again, delighting the crowd, especially the latest arrivals who had yet to see it.
The birders included Daryl Tessen, 84, of Appleton, who started his day about 4 a.m. on a WSO outing in White River Marsh near Berlin.
That event led by Tom Schultz of Green Lake was highly successful, including the finding of a rare yellow rail.
“But nothing compares to this,” Tessen said. “I might be 84 but I feel like a kid when I see a beautiful, new bird in the state.”
Tessen, a birding book author, former WSO president and mentor to many, is considered the dean of Wisconsin birders. The varied bunting was the 435th bird species he’s sighted in Wisconsin, most on record.
Schultz and Carl Schwartz of Fox Point also traveled to Grafton upon conclusion of the field trip.
The group also included the youngest state resident to see the species. Prestby was accompanied by his 18-month-old son, Ari.
Tom Prestby was one of the few who had ever seen a varied bunting before, in Arizona.
“It’s a spectacular sight,” Prestby said. “Even in the desert southwest it’s one of the most stunning birds. And that’s saying something.”
The varied bunting is the latest in a wave of first-ever bird species sightings in Wisconsin. In the last 12 months, the list includes the flame-colored tanager, American flamingo, ancient murrelet and fieldfare.
The varied bunting was also sighted periodically Sunday morning at Lion’s Den Gorge. Mann and Meyer, who initially shared the finding, returned to the site Sunday and posted updates on its presence.
“(Lion’s Den Gorge) is a great migrant (bird) trap,” Meyer said. “It’s always fun to help others see something new. This has been an extraordinary weekend. And you never know what else we might be down there, too.”
Wisconsin
11 Wisconsin Towns With A Slower Pace Of Life
Frank Lloyd Wright spent nearly five decades building and rebuilding Taliesin, his home and architecture school in the hills just outside Spring Green, before it became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2019. Bayfield, the smallest incorporated city in Wisconsin at roughly 600 residents, runs as the mainland gateway to the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore. Lake Geneva preserves a 21-mile public-access shore path that has stayed open since 1888 through an easement granted by the original lakefront landowners. Rib Mountain near Wausau rises out of central Wisconsin as a 1.7-billion-year-old quartzite ridge, one of the oldest geological features in North America. The eleven Wisconsin towns below each run on a different version of slow time.
Lake Geneva
Lake Geneva grew up in the late 19th century as a summer retreat for wealthy Chicago families. The Geneva Lake Shore Path traces the entire 21-mile shoreline as a public-access easement granted by the original lakefront landowners, passing 19th-century estates including the Wrigley, Maytag, Drake, and Schwinn family homes. Black Point Estate and Gardens, a preserved Queen Anne-style mansion on the south shore, opens for public guided boat tours in summer through the Wisconsin Historical Society.
For a different perspective, Lake Geneva Cruise Line runs narrated boat tours including the still-operating US Mail Boat Tour, where a runner jumps from the moving boat to deliver mail to lakeside homes (a tradition dating to 1916 that operates June through mid-September).
Ladysmith
Ladysmith sits along the Flambeau River in northern Wisconsin and was established in 1885. The annual Northland Mardi Gras each July packs a four-day craft fair, parade, and lighted boat parade into a town of fewer than 4,000. The Rusk County Historical Society Museum holds multiple buildings on its grounds, including a replica of the Gates County Courthouse and the Little Red Schoolhouse, with permanent collections covering logging history, antique farm machinery, and military artifacts.
Memorial Park along the Flambeau River anchors community events. The Reclaimed Flambeau Mine Site, a former copper-zinc mine restored to natural habitat, runs walking trails through prairie and woodland on the reclaimed property.
Lake Hallie
Lake Hallie sits just north of Eau Claire on the lake of the same name. The public boat launch handles bass and northern pike fishing in summer and ice fishing in winter. Pinehurst Park covers the year-round outdoor side: bike trails for various skill levels in warmer months, then snowboarding, skiing, and tubing at the park hill once snow falls.
Lake Hallie Golf runs a well-kept course with a driving range and pro shop. The Lake Hallie Sportsman’s Club hosts community fishing contests and steak feeds throughout the year.
Thiensville
Thiensville runs along the Milwaukee River north of its namesake city. The Main Street Historic District holds early 20th-century commercial architecture from the village’s plank-road days. The Green Bay Road Historic District covers the horse-and-buggy era buildings further out.
The Ozaukee Interurban Trail, a 30-mile rail-trail running between Mequon and Belgium, passes through Thiensville with paved biking and walking access. Village Park hosts the Thiensville Village Market every Saturday from June through October, with local produce, artisanal goods, and live music drawing regular weekend crowds.
Bayfield
Bayfield sits on Lake Superior at the northern tip of the Bayfield Peninsula and is the smallest incorporated city in Wisconsin, with roughly 600 year-round residents on less than one square mile. It serves as the mainland gateway to the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, which protects 21 of the 22 Apostle Islands across 69,540 acres of Lake Superior shoreline and water. Apostle Islands Cruises runs narrated sightseeing tours out to the sea caves and historic lighthouses, and local outfitters guide kayak trips into the sandstone caves carved along the cliffs.
Bayfield’s 50-block Historic District dates to its turn-of-the-century timber, fishing, and brownstone boom, when the Queen Anne mansions and commercial storefronts along Rittenhouse Avenue went up. Eckels Pottery, the oldest pottery studio in the state, still operates downtown, and the Bayfield Maritime Museum covers the town’s fishing and lighthouse-keeping past. Bayfield bills itself as the Berry Capital of Wisconsin, and its annual Applefest each October draws crowds far larger than the resident population. A car ferry crosses the channel to Madeline Island, the one Apostle island left out of the national lakeshore and the site of La Pointe, among the oldest European settlements in the state.
Mineral Point
Mineral Point in Iowa County is the third-oldest city in Wisconsin, settled in 1827 during the lead-mining boom that drew waves of Cornish miners from southwestern England. The dugouts those early miners burrowed into the hillsides reportedly resembled badger dens, which is one origin story for Wisconsin’s Badger State nickname. The town of about 2,500 sits roughly 50 miles west of Madison, and its historic district (the first in Wisconsin listed on the National Register of Historic Places) holds more than 500 structures, including 1840s Cornish limestone cottages.
Pendarvis, a cluster of restored stone and timber miners’ cottages on Shake Rag Street operated by the Wisconsin Historical Society, preserves the Cornish settlement and runs costumed-interpreter tours seasonally. High Street holds the densest row of 19th-century commercial buildings in the state, now filled with galleries and pottery studios that have turned Mineral Point into an arts town. The Red Rooster Cafe has served Cornish pasties and figgyhobbin for decades, and the Cornish Festival each September keeps the heritage going. The Mineral Point Railroad Museum occupies the oldest surviving depot in Wisconsin, which operated between 1856 and 1984.
New London
New London sits at the confluence of the Wolf and Embarrass Rivers. The town adopts the name “New Dublin” each year for the St. Patrick’s Day weekend (typically the weekend closest to March 17), with a parade, Irish music, and traditional food drawing thousands. Mosquito Hill Nature Center, a 430-acre Outagamie County natural area, runs hiking trails, summit-overlook viewpoints, and educational programming on the local ecology.
The Heritage Historical Village holds restored period buildings and artifacts covering the area’s settlement. The Newton Blackmour State Trail, a 23-mile rail-trail, passes through town for biking, hiking, and winter snowmobiling.
Spring Green
Spring Green is a village of just over 1,400 people in the Driftless hills of southwestern Wisconsin, on the north bank of the Wisconsin River. Its identity runs almost entirely through Frank Lloyd Wright, who spent boyhood summers in the valley with his mother’s family and then spent nearly five decades, beginning in 1911, building and rebuilding Taliesin, his home, studio, and architecture school, into the brow of a hill just south of town. Wright used local limestone and sand dredged from the Wisconsin River to make the buildings look like they grew out of the landscape. Taliesin was named a National Historic Landmark in 1976 and a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2019.
Spring Green carries more than Wright. The American Players Theatre, an outdoor classical-theater company widely rated among the best in the country, stages Shakespeare and other repertory in a wooded amphitheater through the summer season. The House on the Rock, Alex Jordan’s eccentric hilltop complex south of town, holds oddities including the world’s largest indoor carousel. The Spring Green Preserve, sometimes called the Wisconsin Desert, protects a rare landscape of sand prairie and prickly pear cactus on the bluffs above the river.
Sister Bay
Sister Bay is a Door County village of fewer than 1,000 residents on the Green Bay side of the Door Peninsula. Sister Bay Beach gives the waterfront a grassy public edge, and the pier and Sister Bay Marina put the harbor within a short walk of downtown. Sister Bay Scenic Boat Tours runs easygoing cruises out onto Green Bay, and the village fills with visitors through the summer and the fall-color weeks without ever losing its unhurried feel.
The town’s best-known address is Al Johnson’s Swedish Restaurant and Butik, where goats graze on the grass-covered sod roof through the warm months while the kitchen turns out Swedish pancakes and meatballs below. The waterfront dining scene runs well beyond it, and the surrounding peninsula keeps state parks, orchards, and shoreline drives within easy reach for a day spent doing very little in particular.
Elkhart Lake
Elkhart Lake in Sheboygan County wraps around its namesake spring-fed lake. The sandy public beach handles swimming, kayaking, and paddleboarding through the warmer months. Road America, a 4-mile road-racing circuit just south of the village, has been the country’s premier natural-terrain road course since opening in 1955 and hosts IndyCar, IMSA sports car, and motorcycle races throughout the season.
Aspira Spa at The Osthoff Resort runs full-service treatments inspired by the surrounding lake and forest. Henschel’s Indian Museum & Trout Farm pairs an unusual Native American artifact collection with a working catch-your-own trout pond on the same property.
Rib Mountain
Rib Mountain rises above the city of Wausau as a 1.7-billion-year-old quartzite ridge, one of the oldest geological features in North America. Rib Mountain State Park covers more than 1,500 acres with 15 miles of hiking trails climbing through quartzite ledges to the summit, where a 60-foot observation tower overlooks the Wisconsin River valley.
Granite Peak Ski Area on the south face of Rib Mountain runs 75 named trails across 200 acres of skiable terrain (the largest ski area in Wisconsin) and operates a high-speed six-pack chairlift for fast access. Winter at the state park transforms the upper trails into snowshoeing and cross-country skiing routes.
Eleven Versions Of Slow
The eleven Wisconsin towns above each hang on a specific anchor. Lake Geneva and Elkhart Lake run on summer lakefront tradition, and Sister Bay adds the Door County version up on Green Bay. Ladysmith and New London hold cultural identities (a lumber-town festival, Irish heritage) that bigger cities long ago shed. Bayfield and Mineral Point built theirs on geography and immigrant history, a Lake Superior archipelago and a Cornish lead-mining boom. Spring Green and Rib Mountain anchor architectural and geological specialties. Lake Hallie and Thiensville cluster around a lake and a river for daily recreation. None of them is in a hurry.
Wisconsin
Wisconsin Lottery Mega Millions, Pick 3 results for May 29, 2026
Manuel Franco claims his $768 million Powerball jackpot
Manuel Franco, 24, of West Allis was revealed Tuesday as the winner of the $768.4 million Powerball jackpot.
Mark Hoffman, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
The Wisconsin Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at May 29, 2026, results for each game:
Winning Mega Millions numbers from May 29 drawing
19-24-47-59-65, Mega Ball: 07
Check Mega Millions payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Pick 3 numbers from May 29 drawing
Midday: 8-3-0
Evening: 1-6-0
Check Pick 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Pick 4 numbers from May 29 drawing
Midday: 8-2-0-4
Evening: 3-4-6-6
Check Pick 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning All or Nothing numbers from May 29 drawing
Midday: 02-06-07-08-09-10-12-14-16-18-22
Evening: 02-05-06-10-11-12-15-16-17-18-19
Check All or Nothing payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Badger 5 numbers from May 29 drawing
15-16-19-20-24
Check Badger 5 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning SuperCash numbers from May 29 drawing
23-24-25-30-33-37, Doubler: N
Check SuperCash payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your lottery prize
- Prizes up to $599: Can be claimed at any Wisconsin Lottery retailer.
- Prizes from $600 to $199,999: Can be claimed in person at a Lottery Office. By mail, send the signed ticket and a completed claim form available on the Wisconsin Lottery claim page to: Prizes, PO Box 777 Madison, WI 53774.
- Prizes of $200,000 or more: Must be claimed in person at the Madison Lottery office. Call the Lottery office prior to your visit: 608-261-4916.
Can Wisconsin lottery winners remain anonymous?
No, according to the Wisconsin Lottery. Due to the state’s open records laws, the lottery must, upon request, release the name and city of the winner. Other information about the winner is released only with the winner’s consent.
When are the Wisconsin Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 9:59 p.m. CT on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 10:00 p.m. CT on Tuesday and Friday.
- Super Cash: 9:00 p.m. CT daily.
- Pick 3 (Day): 1:30 p.m. CT daily.
- Pick 3 (Evening): 9:00 p.m. CT daily.
- Pick 4 (Day): 1:30 p.m. CT daily.
- Pick 4 (Evening): 9:00 p.m. CT daily.
- All or Nothing (Day): 1:30 p.m. CT daily.
- All or Nothing (Evening): 9 p.m. CT daily.
- Megabucks: 9:00 p.m. CT on Wednesday and Saturday.
- Badger 5: 9:00 p.m. CT daily.
That lucky feeling: Peek at the past week’s winning numbers.
Feeling lucky? WI man wins $768 million Powerball jackpot **
WI Lottery history: Top 10 Powerball and Mega Million jackpots
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Wisconsin editor. You can send feedback using this form.
Wisconsin
Wisconsin National Guard troops return after yearlong deployment in Middle East
APPLETON, Wis. — More than 200 Wisconsin National Guard troops are back home this weekend.
The troops based out of Appleton returned on Friday after a deployment throughout the Middle East for more than a year.
Members of the Wisconsin National Guard’s 2nd Battalion, 127th Infantry Regiment were treated to a warm welcome home by family and friends at Appleton Flight Center.
Staff Sgt. Ryan Hayes said seeing his family again after being gone for so long was amazing. He said it was especially emotional reuniting with his daughters and his 3-year-old son.
“It was kind of… honestly, kind of tear-jerking a little bit. I was trying to hold… It was hard to hold it back, you know? It’s hard to watch him grow through a phone, you know?” Hayes said.
Major General Matt Strub, Wisconsin’s adjutant general, said troops’ mission included conducting security operations in nine different countries.
He said they also took part in the largest transfer of enemy prisoners of war in Central Command history.
“How long they serve depends on the individual. But this was just a normal one-year rotation into the Middle East to just provide that security that the U.S. needs in the region. During the time they were gone, Operation Epic Fury kicked off. Their mission changed slightly, but still to provide security for the region,” he said.
Gov. Tony Evers was on hand to welcome the troops back to Wisconsin.
Strub said the celebration on Friday was well-earned and well-deserved.
“When they see the fire cannons, the water cannons, when they see the families with the balloons and signs, it’s truly… The joy swells up. The emotion of being gone wells up. You really just feel like you’ve… You’re welcomed home in a positive way,” he said.
Hayes said he felt blessed to be back home with his family.
“I feel really good to be home, be with my kids, another deployment under my belt. That just puts everything into perspective, like how lucky we are back here in the United States to have what we have and be able to have this,” he said.
This group of soldiers worked as part of the U.S. Central Command Area of Responsibility. They worked alongside NATO partners before wrapping up their deployment.
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