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hunting


Ancestral Teachings Keep Hunters Connected to the Land

November 21, 2019 Larry Moore, Office of Communication, USDA Forest Service

To some people, hunting is a foreign concept. In the era of readily-packaged meats easily purchased at a nearby grocery store, the need—outside the sport of it—might seem outdated.

Forestry

Learn, Play, Serve on National Public Lands Day

September 26, 2017 Larry Moore, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

National forests and grasslands deliver countless benefits to the American people. They support economies. They create jobs. They’re home to countless species of fish and wildlife. They offer world-class recreation opportunities. They purify our water and air. The list goes on.

Forestry

This Weekend, Enjoy National Hunting and Fishing Day

September 22, 2017 Misty Jones, Director, Conservation and Environmental Programs Division, Farm Service Agency

America marks National Hunting and Fishing Day on September 23, 2017. It started when Congress unanimously passed a joint resolution and former President Richard Nixon issued a proclamation on May 2, 1972, urging “all citizens to join with outdoor sportsmen in the wise use of our natural resources...

Recreation

Volunteers Clear Weeds to Benefit Rocky Mountain Elk Habitat, Celebrate 50th Year of the Wilderness Act

November 12, 2014 Anne Janik, Grand Mesa, Uncompahgre and Gunnison National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

The Raggeds Wilderness, a nearly 65,000-acre area on the Gunnison and White River National Forests near Paonia, Colorado, is prime elk habitat with herd numbers in the hundreds. Acres of undisturbed coniferous forests are interspersed with open slopes of wet meadows thick with grasses and sedges, a...

Forestry

Unique Collaboration Strategy Brings Trail Users Together in Georgia National Forests

February 22, 2012 Judy Toppins, Public Affairs Staff Officer, Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forests

The Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forests in Georgia receive 2.2 million visitors each year, and their primary activity is use of 850 miles of designated system trails. But it’s not only hikers that take advantage of the recreation opportunities which these trails provide. Cyclists, hunters, anglers...

Forestry
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