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Gulf of Mexico Initiative


USDA and Landowners Work Together to Overcome Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico

April 20, 2015 Justin Fritscher, Natural Resources Conservation Service

In a time of need, America’s private landowners voluntarily made conservation improvements to their land to aid recovery following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico region. Landowners are working with USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to put conservation...

Conservation

Florida Family Farm Adopts Conservation Practices, Helps Gulf of Mexico

January 05, 2015 Doug Ulmer, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Florida

For three generations members of Mitch Holtzclaw’s family has farmed land in Suwanee County, Florida. Today, Holtzclaw grows more than 1,000 acres of peanuts, corn and small grains. His farm is about three miles from the historic Suwannee River, which flows directly into the Gulf of Mexico. The...

Conservation

An Alabama Family Farm Helps Send Cleaner Water to the Gulf of Mexico

October 15, 2014 Fay Garner, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Alabama

Days before planting season in April, up to 26 inches of rain had fallen in southern Alabama over a span of two days. This rain event caused historic flooding in Baldwin County in a coastal part of the state, where farmers had freshly tilled fields in preparation for planting crops. These tilled...

Conservation

Texas Agricultural Landowners Help the Environment and the Gulf of Mexico

January 31, 2012 Melissa Blair, NRCS Texas

For Texas rancher Dallas Ford and other Gulf Coast landowners, the Gulf of Mexico Initiative means an opportunity to make a positive difference not only on their lands, but also in the inland waters that flow into the Gulf of Mexico. The Gulf of Mexico Initiative (GoMI) is a new program of USDA’s...

Conservation

Ag Producers Improve Two Coastal Bayous in Mississippi Through New Gulf of Mexico Initiative

December 21, 2011 Justin Fritscher, NRCS Mississippi

For Kiln, Miss. resident David Koch, there’s a lot of truth to the expression “everything runs downstream.” Koch’s land borders Rotten Bayou, and he has made great strides to ensure no pollutants wash off his land and into the bayou, which feeds the Gulf of Mexico.

Conservation
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