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Growing Local Food Connections with International Communities

September 25, 2015 Laura Crowell, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Iowa

Tucked away behind a hardware store and in between several Storm Lake, Iowa, housing developments, sits a freshly planted 4.5-acre garden project organized by “The Bridge of Storm Lake,” a non-profit organization that serves growing immigrant communities. Supported in part through a $2,500 outreach...

Conservation

Late Blight: A Ripening Issue for Central Pennsylvania Farmers

September 25, 2015 USDA Northeast Climate Hub (Luke Blair, 2015 Summer Intern)

Perhaps there is such a thing as too much of a good thing. Many farmers in central Pennsylvania would aptly agree to this notion after experiencing above average amounts of rainfall this summer. In fact, rainfall during June and July in central Pennsylvania was more than four inches above average...

Conservation

Expanding Insurance Availability Benefits More Producers

September 24, 2015 Brandon Willis, Risk Management Agency Administrator

Each year the nation’s farmers and ranchers confront tough business decisions, adverse weather, and harvesting challenges – striving to balance seasonal planning, as well as long-term planning for future generations. We recognize that producers’ needs shift over time, and the Risk Management Agency...

USDA Results Farming

Forest Service waives fees in support of the nation’s largest volunteer effort on public lands

September 24, 2015 Ellita Willis, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

As the fall season slowly matriculates and the autumn equinox makes its debut, volunteers are encouraged to give back by participating in the annual National Public Lands Day. National Public Lands Day, in its 22 nd year, is the nation’s largest, single-day volunteer effort in support of public...

Forestry

Wisconsin Farm Serves as an Example for How Conservation Benefits Agricultural Operations

September 24, 2015 Tivoli Gough, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Wisconsin

Some people are born to farm. Others grow to love it. Greg Nettekoven was born into a farm family, and he and his wife, Karon, have grown to love farming. Greg is a second-generation farmer, and when he took the reins of the family farm in 1988, he changed the livestock operation into a vegetable...

Conservation

New Perspectives on the Dynamics of Dry Lands

September 23, 2015 Rosalie Marion Bliss, Public Affairs Specialist, Agricultural Research Service

Vast acreage of dry lands may evoke images of a desolate, scorched desert that is uninhabitable to humans. But the arid and semi-arid dry lands of about half of both the United States’ and the world’s land surfaces actually are complex ecosystems made up variously of grasses, shrubs, agriculture...

Initiatives Research and Science

Southern Plains Climate Hub Helps Land Managers Build Resilience to Climate Variability

September 23, 2015 Jean Steiner, USDA Climate Hubs Southern Plains Lead

Wind-devastated farmland in Kansas during the Dust Bowl. The U.S. Southern Plains states have always been known for their wild weather. Stories of the volatile climate of this region abound. Whether you’re talking about Pecos Bill roping a tornado in Texas, Dorothy being blown away by a twister to...

Minnesota Farmers Restore Coldwater Stream in Driftless Area

September 23, 2015 Julie MacSwain, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Minnesota

Pine Creek wanders through prairies and rocky bluffs, and forests and pastures, including the land where Ryan Pulley raises beef in southeastern Minnesota. Pine Creek is beautiful – fed by limestone springs and home to freshwater trout. Coldwater streams like Pine Creek flow throughout the Driftless...

Conservation

Do YOU Have a Plan to Keep Food Safe during Severe Weather?

September 23, 2015 Christopher Bernstein, Food Safety Education Staff, Food Safety and Inspection Service, USDA

Disaster can strike at anytime and any place. You might live in a region of the country that already has experienced some form of extreme weather event, such as wildfires, extreme cold and snow, or obstructive tornadoes, to name a few. All of these events result in power outages for hundreds of...

Health and Safety

Forest Service Funds Landmark Climate Change Study

September 23, 2015 Robert Westover, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

Preparing for the effects of climate change, the U.S. Forest Service has taken the lead in a new report that highlights actions taken by federal agencies to adapt to a changing climate. “Some federal agen­cies are making good progress in climate change adaptation,” said University of Washington...

Forestry

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