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Texas


On the Right Side of the Promise

March 02, 2015 Joe Leonard, Jr. Ph.D

As a school kid during the first years of desegregation in the public schools of Austin, Texas, much of my experience of the world around me was shaped by color. I saw and experienced firsthand how discrimination and inequality can stunt and hold back too many Americans--not only through violence...

Initiatives

Want to Know about Soil Moisture on your Farm? Soon, There May be an App for That

March 02, 2015 Wayne Maloney, USDA Office of Communications

“Probably it is one of the most innovative interagency tools on the planet.” So said Dr. Roger Pulwarty, Director of the National Integrated Drought Information System (of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, located in Boulder, CO), in describing the development of a coordinated...

Conservation

Waving Wheat Still Smells Sweet in Oklahoma

February 26, 2015 Wil Hundl, Oklahoma State Statistician, National Agricultural Statistics Service

The Census of Agriculture is the most complete account of U.S. farms and ranches and the people who operate them. Every Thursday USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service will highlight new Census data and the power of the information to shape the future of American agriculture. Oklahoma...

Conservation

At the Agricultural Outlook Forum, Prognosticators Peer Ahead to 2060

February 25, 2015 Wayne Maloney, Office of Communications

No one can say with certainty what the American climate will be like 45 years from now, but looking at climate models discussed at the Agricultural Outlook Forum last week in suburban Washington, D.C., the best prediction is that the American southwest will be drier, the northwest may get more rain...

Conservation

Oklahoma Ranchers' Unflinching Courage Helps Them Thrive Despite Adversity

February 09, 2015 Tanya Brown, Outreach Marketing Writer/Editor, Farm Service Agency

Since 2011, Julie Carr and her husband Robert slowly watched everything they worked for dry up and wither away. Julie calls those days lemonade days — long stretches of hardship where life is throwing nothing but lemons and by the end of the day she has made lemonade. But those days were anything...

Conservation

USDA Foods Hatches New Chicken Product for Schools

January 21, 2015 Lindsay Walle, USDA Food and Nutrition Service, Food Distribution Division

School lunches have evolved since many of our childhood days to keep pace with new dietary guidelines and school meal patterns, but one food has been an enduring component: chicken. The popular protein graces the center of the plate in a variety of forms and flavors, and the new USDA Foods...

Food and Nutrition

USDA Helps a Texas Rancher Reach His Dream of Operating a Successful Ranch

December 23, 2014 Dee Ann Littlefield, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Texas

One central Texas rancher is fulfilling a childhood dream. Rickie Roddy bought his first cow when he was 14 years old. By the time he was 19, he had grown his herd to 13 head of cattle. “I have always been fascinated by cattle,” Roddy said. “I didn’t know if I was ever going to be able to have any...

Conservation

The Pham Family Farm, Immigrants Making a Good Life in Mississippi

December 08, 2014 Judi Craddock, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Mississippi

Just outside Hazlehurst, Mississippi, a community of 4,000 about 30 miles south of Jackson, lies a poultry farm owned by a Vietnamese farm family whose lives are an amazing story of survival and determination. Hung and Nancy Pham are refugees who fled the former South Vietnam as teenagers in a...

Conservation

REE Shows Children in Rural America How Ag Science Rocks

December 02, 2014 Melvin Washington, Confidential Assistant, Research, Education and Economics Mission Area

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. You may be surprised by the answers you get when you ask a group of middle schoolers, “What do you like about science?”...

Research and Science

Rice Farmer Helps Migratory Birds, Cleans Water on Texas Coast

November 13, 2014 Beverly Moseley, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Texas

When 168,000 gallons of oil was reported to be spilled this spring into Texas’ Houston Ship Channel because of a collision between a barge and tanker, it was a reminder of the vulnerability of the Gulf of Mexico’s coastal wildlife and habitats. The spill served to highlight the continued need for...

Conservation
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