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Transitioning to Organic Certification

April 21, 2016 Betsy Rakola, USDA Organic Policy Advisor

More and more farmers are entering the organic market. Just last year, the number of certified operations in the U.S. grew by almost 12 percent - more than double the growth rate of 2014. So how do farmers, ranchers, and food processors make the transition to organic? We talked to one farming family...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Farming

Conservation Wildlife Enhancements Inspire Creativity in a Delaware Farmer

April 20, 2016 Dastina Wallace, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Muffled honking above draws wildlife painter Richard Clifton’s eyes to the sky. Flying overhead is a flock of nearly 30 snow geese preparing to land nearby in Clifton’s crop field in Milton, Delaware. In early March, this is a common scene due to his unique wetland ‘plant and flood’ restoration...

Conservation

Refugee Farmers Set Down Roots, Honor Traditions in Vermont

April 18, 2016 Amy Overstreet, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Rwanda native Janine Ndagijimana, her husband Faustine and their children moved to Burlington, Vermont in 2007 after living in a refugee camp in Tanzania for 13 years. Now a U.S. citizen, she works closely with Ben Waterman, the New American Farmer Program coordinator at the University of Vermont...

Conservation Farming

USDA Engages Public through Crowdsourcing and Citizen Science

April 15, 2016 Samuel Crowell, AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow, USDA Office of the Chief Scientist

Recently, USDA participated in the White House launch of the Federal Crowdsourcing and Citizen Science (CCS) Toolkit. By providing federal employees with information about developing CCS activities, the Toolkit will eventually allow the Federal government to design more programs that ask citizens to...

Research and Science Technology

Next Crop of Farmers and Soil Scientists Cultivated on Working Farm/Outdoor Classroom

April 13, 2016 Dorlene Butler, Natural Resources Conservation Service

USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service is celebrating National Volunteer Week April 10-16, 2016, by thanking and honoring its Earth Team volunteers for their service to conservation. When Otis Donald Philen, Jr. decided to combine his working farm operation with an outdoor classroom, he knew...

Conservation

Veteran Now Serves Escondido Agriculture Community

April 11, 2016 Dorlene Butler, Natural Resources Conservation Service

USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service is celebrating National Volunteer Week April 10-16, 2016, by thanking and honoring its Earth Team volunteers for their service to conservation. After service in the U.S. Navy, that included deployment to Kuwait and Afghanistan, Commander Theresa Everest...

Conservation Farming

Earth Team Volunteers and People's Garden Benefit a Nevada Community

April 06, 2016 Dorlene Butler, Natural Resources Conservation Service

“This partnership couldn’t have worked out any better,” said Academy of Arts, Careers and Technology (AACT) Agriculture Teacher Michelle Burrows. As part of a senior project to put their agricultural and leadership skills into practice, Earth Team volunteers Samantha (Sam) Antipa and Monique...

Conservation Initiatives

New Beginnings Spring from the Homeless Garden Project

April 05, 2016 Suzanne Pender, Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)

The Homeless Garden Project (HGP) in Santa Cruz, California provides sanctuary, refuge and meaningful work for homeless citizens within the healing environment of a three-acre organic farm in Santa Cruz, California. This unique urban garden and farm is inspired by the joy that comes from growing and...

Conservation Farming

New Study Highlights Redcedar's Impact on Prairie Chickens, Helps Improve Conservation Efforts

April 01, 2016 Jon Ungerer, Natural Resources Conservation Service

A new study offers the first empirical data proving that female lesser prairie-chickens avoid grasslands when trees are present. The study, highlighted in a Science to Solutions report by the Lesser Prairie-Chicken Initiative (LPCI), underscores the importance of removing woody invasive plants like...

Conservation

Acequia de Las Joyas Blooms with Traditional Irrigation Methods

March 29, 2016 Rey Adame, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Spaniards built the Acequia de Las Joyas approximately 300 years ago. The acequia, a community irrigation watercourse or ditch, was the principal method of providing water to the farmers for their crop and rangelands in northern New Mexico. The parciantes (also known as acequia members) worked...

Conservation
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