Southwest Path Alliance

Southwest Path Alliance Owlpath, home of the Southwest Path Alliance:
Dedicated to safe use and shared habitat PHOTOS
If you take a good photo on the SW Path please post it here!

The Southwest Path is a 4-mile-long contiguous strip of mature forest, prairie restorations and seasonal wetland that was miraculously preserved from agriculture and development first by the sloping terrain and then by the Central Illinois rail line built in 1889. In many places, it is an ecological snapshot of the four lakes region prior to European settlement. YOUR INPUT
If you notice something

detrimental to the safe or shared use of this space, or to its surrounding habitat, send a message or use posts to this page as a forum where path users can together help figure out solutions. For issues involving city agencies or practices, write your alder and ask for some respect for the shared habitat of the Southwest Path. The emails of alders of districts on the section of SW Path between Regent and the Beltline are:


[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]

Here are some recent recommendations for better sharing of the SW Path and its surrounding habitat:

LIGHTING:
- Dim the overhead streetlights installed against the wishes of most path users in 2011 (still 17 lm, eye level)
- Replace fixtures with fully shielded styles
- Re-do system with 6x as many bollard fixtures

The highly non-uniform nature of current lighting system is clearly an overall detriment to navigation and personal security in this visually-isolated path. The current fixtures are against WisDOT guidelines for lighting of off-street bike paths and make bike riders periodically blind to pedestrians and to the pavement directly in front of them (because of the shadow cast by their own body). High-glare overhead lighting in this isolated area also makes path users more vulnerable to rare occurrences of predatory criminality by making obvious their personal characteristics, possessions and vulnerabilities, while providing a covert vantage point in the deep shadows all along the sides of the path. POISONING OF ANCIENT HABITATS:
-The city should not use rock salt except for spot applications. Salt brine pre-treatments should never be used for winter maintenance- it is not necessary, it forms sticky, corrosive slush and consistently results in dangerous glare ice. Brine treatments are also very damaging to bikes, shoes, and paws. SIGNAGE:
The green street signs that say "SW BIKE PATH" are misleading and obsolete. They should be replaced with the newer (bike-ped icon) signs that say simply "SW PATH". OUTREACH
If there are other path-related conservation and user groups out there, let's work together to protect these unique and highly-visited linear green spaces, and make them safer for all users, day and night. Elected officials and city staff should be familiar with, and fiercely protective of Madison's green spaces and motor-free transportation corridors. These paths and green-spaces are unique city assets and their unique shared character is socially beneficial on multiple levels.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1RPvXLT8a2/
05/15/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1RPvXLT8a2/

If garlic mustard is on your land, your window to pull it is open right now — and it won't be for long!

Garlic mustard sets seed quickly once it flowers, so pulling before that happens makes a real difference. Get it while the soil is moist, roots and all, and bag what you pull. Even an hour on a cool morning can cover a lot of ground.

Honeysuckle and buckthorn are also still relatively accessible before the understory fully closes in. Stems are easier to spot, treat, and revisit now than in the thick of summer.

Learn more about garlic mustard here: https://mywisconsinwoods.org/questions/healthy-woods/invasive-species/invasive-plant-garlic-mustard/

📸 Authentic Wisconsin

Bald Eagle dining in an oak tree next to the Southwest Path, Madison, WI, May 1, 2026.
05/03/2026

Bald Eagle dining in an oak tree next to the Southwest Path, Madison, WI, May 1, 2026.

03/20/2026

None of this made you safer.

03/11/2026
03/05/2026

PEANUTS ARE NOT NUTS.
Your daily "treat" is a slow-motion skeletal collapse.

Walk through a city park on a crisp late-February afternoon, and you will see the same scene repeated a thousand times: a well-meaning neighbor reaching into a bag to toss a peanut to a waiting squirrel. It feels like an act of kindness in the cold—a small calorie boost for a struggling animal. But beneath the fur, a biological catastrophe is unfolding. In the world of sciurid physiology, a peanut is not a nut; it is a metabolic time bomb.

1️⃣ THE MYTH OF THE SEED-EATER
We have a cultural tendency to group all "crunchy" things together as appropriate squirrel food. We view the squirrel as a generic consumer of seeds and nuts, assuming that if they eat it with enthusiasm, it must be good for them. The reality is that squirrels are highly specialized foragers with a razor-thin margin for error in their blood chemistry.

2️⃣ THE SCIENTIFIC REALITY: THE CALCIUM CATASTROPHE
Peanuts are botanically legumes, not tree nuts. Because they grow underground, they possess a nutritional profile that is fundamentally incompatible with a squirrel’s winter survival.

The Phosphorus Trap: Peanuts are exceptionally high in phosphorus and critically low in calcium.

Metabolic Bone Disease (MBD): When a squirrel’s phosphorus levels spike, its body must maintain a strict blood-calcium ratio to keep the heart beating. To do this, it is forced to strip calcium from its own skeletal structure.

Skeletal Dissolution: Over time, the bones become porous and "spongy". A squirrel with MBD doesn't just get "weak"; its spine can collapse, its legs can bow, and its teeth—which are vital for survival—can become too brittle to chew.

3️⃣ WHAT IS HAPPENING RIGHT NOW (LATE FEBRUARY)
In late February, the stakes are at their highest annual peak.

The Cache Crisis: Natural caches of high-calcium acorns and walnuts are nearly exhausted.

The Nursing Pulse: Many female squirrels are currently nursing their first litters of the year. Lactation requires a massive surge in calcium to build the skeletons of the kits in the nest.

The Addiction: Like humans with processed "junk food," squirrels will prioritize easy, high-fat peanuts over the hard work of foraging for varied natural minerals. When a nursing mother relies on your peanuts right now, she isn't just weakening her own bones; she is producing calcium-deficient milk that sets her young up for failure before they even leave the drey.

4️⃣ ECOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE: THE FOREST ARCHITECT
The health of our forests depends on the skeletal integrity of the squirrel.

Forgetting for the Future: Squirrels are the primary drivers of oak and hickory regeneration through their "scatter-hoarding" behavior.

The Memory-Physical Link: A squirrel suffering from the early stages of MBD is lethargic and slow. It lacks the energy to travel, to cache, or to remember its hiding spots. When we provide "slow poison" in the form of peanuts, we aren't just hurting an individual; we are slowing down the very engine that plants our future canopy.

5️⃣ GESTURES FOR TODAY: FEED REAL NUTS (OR NOTHING)
True kindness in late winter requires nutritional literacy:

Choose True Tree Nuts: If you must feed, offer unsalted, in-shell walnuts, hazelnuts, pecans, or almonds. The shell provides necessary dental wear while the nut provides the correct mineral balance.

The "Block" Alternative: If you are caring for a high-traffic urban population, consider commercial squirrel "blocks" designed to provide balanced minerals.

Let Them Forage: The absolute best option is to allow them to find their own balance of bark, fungi, and dormant insects.

6️⃣ THE PRICE OF CONVENIENCE
A peanut is a "legume of convenience" for humans, but a death sentence for a squirrel. If you wish to be kind during the final frosts of February, offer the food their biology was designed to process. Don’t let your perceived kindness become the reason their bones break in the spring.

📚 SCIENTIFIC REFERENCES & DATA
MBD Mechanism: Research from the National Wildlife Rehabilitators Association (NWRA) confirms that an imbalanced calcium-to-phosphorus ratio is the primary cause of nutritional secondary hyperparathyroidism (MBD) in urban sciurids.

Winter Energetics: Data from university mammalogy programs and the USDA Forest Service highlight the increased mineral demands of nursing squirrels during the late-winter bottleneck.

Nutritional Profiles: The USDA FoodData Central confirms that peanuts (legumes) have a significantly lower calcium-to-phosphorus ratio compared to native tree nuts like acorns.

02/03/2026

THE DROP IS DROWNING. 💧🚫

You found a stunned bird. It looks thirsty. You grab an eyedropper or a spoon to give it water. You tilt its head back and drip a little in.

STOP. You are killing it.

Giving water to a bird the wrong way is the #1 mistake rescuers make. You aren't hydrating it. You are drowning it.

Here is the science of "Aspiration Pneumonia":

1. The Hole in the Floor 🕳️ Open your mouth. Your windpipe is in the back. Open a bird's beak. Their windpipe (The Glottis) is right on the floor of their mouth, under the tongue. It looks like a little slit. If you sq**rt water into the beak, or tilt the head back, the water flows right into that hole.

2. The 24-Hour Death ☠️ The water doesn't go to the stomach. It goes to the lungs. The bird might look fine for an hour. But that water fills their delicate Air Sacs. Bacteria grow instantly. Within 24 hours, the bird dies of pneumonia. It is a slow, painful, preventable death.

3. The Safe Method: "The Q-Tip Sip" 🧪 Never pour. Never sq**rt. If you must give water (and usually, you shouldn't—just get it to a rehabber):

Dip a Q-Tip in water.

Touch the side of the beak (not the front).

Let the bird suck the moisture off the cotton on its own. If it doesn't suck, it is too injured to drink. Stop immediately.

Hydration is medicine. Dosage matters.



📌 Quick FAQ
Q: What if I use a spoon? A: Still risky. 🥄 It is very hard to control the volume. A "sip" to you is a "bucket" to a Chickadee. If the bird gasps, it inhales the spoon's contents.

Q: But they drink rain, right? A: Yes, actively. 🌧️ When a bird drinks naturally, it dips its beak, fills it, and then tips its head back voluntarily. It controls the glottis muscle perfectly. When you pour it in, you bypass that control.

Q: What about baby birds? A: NEVER give water. 🐣 Baby birds get 100% of their hydration from the bugs/food their parents bring. They do not drink liquid water. Giving water to a baby bird is almost a guaranteed death sentence.

12/20/2025

Earlier this week, there was a large community effort to help a Canada Goose with fishing line wrapped around its neck in the Yahara River. It’s incredibly inspiring to see how much our community cares about wildlife in need—thank you to everyone who spoke up and tried to help!

This situation also highlighted some confusion about our Wildlife Center, specifically whether we admit waterfowl. We want to clear that up:

Yes—we DO take waterfowl, including ducks and geese! 🦆

This goose was successfully brought to Dane County Humane Society's Wildlife Center, where our team safely removed the fishing line. There was no hook attached, and the goose is doing well, with a good prognosis for recovery. It’s currently recovering in a large indoor space alongside two other geese being treated for their own injuries.

Some of the confusion likely stems from several years ago, when we temporarily stopped admitting waterfowl during the emergence of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI). That pause was short-term to protect other patients from infection, and we resumed caring for waterfowl once we felt it was safe enough to do so.

If you ever find wildlife in need, please call us. Our voicemail message always lists the species we are currently admitting, and you are welcome to leave a message if you’re unsure. Even if we’re not the right place for a particular animal, we’re happy to help connect you with other local resources.

We are here to help, both wildlife and our community, as much as we can with the resources we have. Thank you all for caring.

From the comments, it looks like people in Kewaunee understand that brine spraying is counterproductive, at best...
12/10/2025

From the comments, it looks like people in Kewaunee understand that brine spraying is counterproductive, at best...

❄️ Why We Use Salt Brine on Roads ❄️
As the temperatures start to drop, we get lots of questions about salt brine—so here’s a quick look at what it is and why we use it!

Salt brine is simply rock salt and water, mixed to create a solution that helps keep roads safer by lowering the freezing point of water to about 15°F. When applied before a storm, it prevents snow and ice from bonding to the pavement, making roads easier to clear and reducing the amount of salt needed later. In fact, pretreating can use four times less salt than trying to melt ice after it forms!

During a storm, brine helps road salt work faster and stay in place instead of blowing away—especially in colder temps.

And the results speak for themselves: according to the Wisconsin DOT’s Winter Maintenance at a Glance 2024–2025 report, Kewaunee County has reduced salt use by 17% per lane mile, saving nearly $50,000 a year—all while keeping roads safer and reducing environmental impact.

We hope this gives you a clearer picture of how brine works and why we use it.

For more information on the county's brine usage, head over to the county website for a full explanation from County Highway Commissioner Marty Treml:https://www.kewauneeco.org/i/f/salt%20brine%20info.pdf

Stay safe this winter! 🌨️🚘

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Madison, WI
53711

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