Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Forestry


Shawnee National Forest's Camel Rock Coming Soon to a Pocket near You

January 19, 2016 Sue Hirsch, Public Affairs Specialist, Shawnee National Forest

When hiking through amazing sandstone rock formations in the U.S. Forest Service’s Shawnee National Forest, in Illinois, one particular formation inevitably catches your attention, a camel stoically perched overlooking a spectacular landscape. It is this striking image, called Camel Rock, that was...

Forestry

Improving Forest Practices One Beehive at a Time in Ghana

January 14, 2016 Karin Theophile, U.S. Forest Service, International Programs

All over the world, deforestation and forest degradation are under the microscope because together they comprise the second greatest driver of climate change. If you focus on the country of Ghana, you’ll find one of the highest deforestation rates in Africa. In fact, the country has lost nearly 90...

Forestry Trade

Simple Measures Pave Way to Recovery for Rare Kentucky Plant

January 12, 2016 Tyler Willingham, U.S. Forest Service, Southern Region

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. A hike through Kentucky’s Red River Gorge is a trip that outdoor enthusiasts never forget. The adventure begins amid rugged...

Forestry

46 Million-Year-Old Eocene World in a Forest

January 07, 2016 Michael A. Fracasso, US Forest Service

An intrepid fossil hunter on the U.S. Forest Service’s Flathead National Forest in northwest Montana doesn’t need to dig too deep to find exquisitely preserved fossil insects with traces of their original stomach contents. Amazing as this sounds you just need to visit rock outcrops of the Kishenehn...

Forestry

The Chugach Children's Forest is Transforming Lives for Future Generations

December 17, 2015 Carita Chan, U.S. Forest Service, National Forest Systems

“If you were to tell me three years ago that in two years, I would be camping a couple feet away from a glacier and kayaking next to icebergs, I would tell you that you are out of your mind,” said Isabel Azpilcueta. But life takes us in unexpected directions, and that is exactly what Isabel – a...

Forestry

Saving Our Forest Heritage in a Vault

December 16, 2015 Gary Man and Randy Johnson, U.S. Forest Service

Trees are often referred to as the lungs of the earth, providing not only the oxygen we need to breathe but a filter to clean our air and water. Trees from forested lands provide timber for our homes, food for people and wildlife, protection from weather extremes and, in urban and rural settings...

Forestry

Forest Service Teams Help in Aftermath of Historic Flooding in Tbilisi, Georgia

December 15, 2015 Karin Theophile, U.S. Forest Service, International Programs

Last summer, after a flash flood swept through Tbilisi, the capital of the nation of Georgia, the U.S. Forest Service deployed three teams to help address some of the most critical challenges. The horrific event killed 19 people, forced 67 families from their homes, destroyed roads, and flooded the...

Forestry Trade

Protecting Sage Grouse for Future Generations... One Seed at a Time

December 14, 2015 Jane Knowlton, U.S. Forest Service

The need for food and shelter for wildlife to survive is basic, particularly for sage grouse living in a post-wildfire landscape in western states. The U.S. Forest Service is helping this upland game bird survive by growing about 3 million sagebrush shrubs a year to restore the area’s dry, grassy...

Forestry

Job Corps Students, Alumnae 'Pay it Forward,' Helping Each Other Learn Leadership Skills

December 08, 2015 Michaela Hall and Jane Knowlton, U.S. Forest Service

Preparing for a career involves many steps, plus individual motivation as well as help from those who’ve gone before you. That’s what a group of 60 Harpers Ferry Job Corps students explored recently during a recent training session related to job preparedness for the U.S. Forest Service. Their...

Initiatives Forestry

Northern Lights Shine on Capitol Hill

December 03, 2015 Robert Westover, US Forest Service

When U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan asked Anna Devolld, a ten year old child from Alaska, to flip the switch, a momentary hush came across the crowd as thousands of lights on a massive tree illumined the West Lawn just below both Houses of Congress. More than a year of planning went...

Forestry
Subscribe to Forestry

AskUSDA

One central entry point for you to access information and help from USDA.