Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Forestry


Smokejumpers Celebrate 75 Years of Service

August 10, 2015 Christine Cozakos, U.S. Forest Service

In 1940, Rufus Robinson and Earl Cooley made U.S. Forest Service history parachuting onto a fire over Martin Creek on the Nez Perce National Forest in Idaho. This historic jump started an elite smokejumper program, a program born of necessity and innovation. Since then, smokejumpers have played a...

Forestry

Celebrating 25 Years of Grand Island National Recreation Area

August 07, 2015 Leah Anderson, Eastern Region, U.S. Forest Service

With breathtaking views of Lake Superior, sandstone cliffs, pristine beaches and rich history, Michigan’s Grand Island National Recreation Area is definitely your gateway to “cross over to adventure!” Surrounded on every side by rugged Great Lake waters, Grand Island has been managed by the Hiawatha...

Forestry

Healthy Soils Provide Foundation for a Healthy Life on National Forests and Grasslands

August 06, 2015 John Lane, Acting National Soils Program Manager, U. S. Forest Service

Soils sustain life. Without soils there would be no life as we know it. Consider what healthy soils mean for the 154 national forests and 20 grasslands in 44 states and Puerto Rico. Soils provide the fertility needed to grow the plants, forests and grasslands that support and shelter humans and...

Forestry

The Cost of Fighting Wildfires is Sapping Forest Service Budget

August 05, 2015 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

Cross-posted from the Seattle Times: Wildfires are now burning in Washington and across the West, in a year that may become the hottest on record. As our forests go up in flames, so too does the budget of the U.S. Forest Service, putting at risk lives, property, clean air and water, and jobs for...

Forestry

Catch a Wild Alaskan Sockeye: Watch Live Stream as the Annual Homecoming Begins

July 30, 2015 Teresa Haugh, Alaska Region, and Jane Knowlton, Washington Office, U.S. Forest Service

An easy nine miles from the city of Juneau, a portion of a small non-glacial tributary creek nestled among alder, cottonwood and beds of dense, lush moss and understory vegetation is again sharing its ancient story of birth, death and renewal: sockeye and coho salmon are swimming home to spawn. Yet...

Forestry

Wildfire-Related Tragedy Leads to Landmark Forest Restoration Partnership

July 28, 2015 L.F. Chambers, Office of Legislative Affairs, U.S. Forest Service

The Schultz Fire of 2010 started with an abandoned campfire. High winds blew the flames into neighboring trees and brush, igniting a wildfire that would grow to 15,000 acres of the Coconino National Forest and threaten residents near Flagstaff, Arizona. In the following days 750 homes would be...

Forestry

Recognizing the Value of Cleaner Watersheds

July 23, 2015 Jonas Epstein, National Forest System, U.S. Forest Service

The mission of the Forest Service is to “sustain the health, diversity and productivity of the Nation’s forests and grasslands to meet the needs of present and future generations.” The provisioning of water resources – notably clean drinking water and flood control – is central to this. Growing...

Forestry

Could Forest Thinning Help Ease Water Shortages in the United States?

July 22, 2015 Stephanie Worley Firley, U.S. Forest Service Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center

Planning for the future of the nation’s water resources is more important now than ever before as severe drought grips the West, affecting heavily populated areas and critical agricultural regions. Forests generally yield huge quantities of water—much more than crops or grasslands—but also use a lot...

Forestry

Migrating Monarchs

July 17, 2015 Karin Theophile, International Programs, U.S. Forest Service

Last month, beautiful monarch butterflies floated across Chicago’s skyline as a part of their annual migration. During this year’s journey, they found more milkweed plants in several places along their paths because of an innovative program that connects urban communities with nature. Area school...

Forestry Trade

Working with Beavers to Restore Watersheds

July 15, 2015 Cathy Dowd, Research and Development, Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest

The Methow Beaver Project is a bit uncommon as far as forest health restoration projects go, because it relies on one of nature’s greatest engineers – the beaver. Beavers build dams on rivers and streams, and build homes (“lodges”) in the resulting bodies of still, deep water to protect against...

Forestry
Subscribe to Forestry

AskUSDA

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