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Showing: 901 - 910 of 8106 Results

Be Amazed by the Colors of Fall

September 23, 2019 Robert Hudson Westover, Office of Communications, USDA Forest Service

There are so many beautiful songs and poems written about autumn. And images! Amazing Fall Colors Flickr pictures and Forest Service YouTube videos of trees and flowers aglow with brilliant reds, yellows and oranges among the many iridescent shades of the color spectrum—see what I mean! Fall just...

Forestry

Forest Service Helps Small Farmers Hit Hard by Hurricanes

September 20, 2019 Yaneris M. Soto Muñiz, Media Specialist, USDA Forest Service

José (Tato) Roig’s farm has been producing coffee since 1978 and has become one of the most successful farms in Puerto Rico’s Coffee Zone. However, Hurricane Maria inflicted severe damage on his crops, as well as those of many other coffee growers.

Forestry

Mirror, Mirror, What Do You See? I See a Scientist Looking at Me

September 17, 2019 Justice Wright, Deputy Director of Communications, Research, Education and Economics mission area

Strolling down the aisles of most toy departments, parents are likely to see more diverse options such as a brown-faced doll holding her microscope and African-American action figures in engineering sets. Many toy manufacturers have removed the stigma of “traditional gender roles” and created...

Research and Science

Oregon Agriculture Helps You Celebrate Year-Round

September 13, 2019 Dave Losh, Oregon State Statistician, National Agricultural Statistics Service

Oregon farmers and ranchers produce more than 230 types of agriculture products every year. Many of Oregon’s top commodities are seasonal and holiday favorites. The 2017 Census of Agriculture data provide a key for enjoying these quality products in the coming months.

Research and Science

The Forest Cookie Connection

September 12, 2019 Aurora Cutler, Office of Sustainability and Climate, USDA Forest Service

Having learned about recent fires in the Amazon rainforest at school, my first grader came home with a head full of ideas on how to protect what many call the lungs of the Earth—and all the animals that live there: a bake sale.

Forestry

Teaching and Reaching those Frequently ‘Left Behind’

September 12, 2019 Scott Elliott, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

The digital divide between population centers and rural America is a fact of life. For some, it’s simply a lack of cell phone coverage; for others, it signals a lack of education for their children.

Research and Science

Agricultural Business Remains Vital to Customers by Keeping Its Old-Fashioned Values

September 12, 2019 Timothy P. Hobbs, USDA Rural Development State Director for Maine

Andy and Valerie Cole are the husband and wife team who own Andy’s Agway in rural Dayton, Maine. It’s an impressive operation - in no small part because the Coles still run their agricultural business on the fundamental values their family began with over a century ago.

Rural

The Psychology of Food Waste: An Interview with Brian Roe and Laura Moreno

September 09, 2019 Jimmy Nguyen, Program Analyst, USDA Food and Nutrition Service

What’s the psychology behind food waste and what can we do to change our behavior? This interview features insights from Brian Roe, Professor and Faculty Lead at The Ohio State University’s Food Waste Collaborative and Laura Moreno, who received her Ph.D. studying food waste at the University of...

Initiatives

Get Back to Healthful Eating With the Help of the DRI Calculator!

September 03, 2019 the Food and Nutrition Information Center staff, National Agricultural Library

What better time to get back to healthful eating than right now? As summer ends and before the holiday season begins, it’s a good time to take account of your goals and get to know your nutrient recommendations. Have you often wondered how to relate the nutrients listed on food labels to your...

Research and Science

Trees can do the Dirty Work of Waste Cleanup

August 30, 2019 Diane Banegas, Research and Development, USDA Forest Service

When it comes to ridding the earth of pollution leaking from dumps, closed landfills, and other waste sites, specific types of trees are quietly and efficiently absorbing the toxins.

Forestry

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