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Forestry


Lead Climbing Ranger Thrives on His Job

May 07, 2015 John C. Heil III, Pacific Southwest Regional Office, U.S. Forest Service

Nick Meyers has always enjoyed recreation whether it is mountain climbing or biking, kayaking, dirt biking, surfing, kite surfing, fishing, tinkering around the house, landscaping, working on motors, wood working, dog training or backpacking - he is all in. He also knows the value of working hard...

Forestry

USDA Celebrates the Public Service of 12 Unsung Heroes

May 06, 2015 Assistant Secretary for Administration Dr. Gregory Parham

Every day, USDA employees are hard at work providing safe, nutritious food for our families and children; conserving our land and natural resources; supporting our nation’s farmers and ranchers; expanding market opportunities for American agriculture at home and abroad; and investing in our rural...

Conservation Health and Safety Forestry Animals Plants Research and Science

A New Way to Stop Invasive Pests - Clean Recreation

May 05, 2015 Melissa Jenkins, Forest Health Protection, U.S. Forest Service

For years now, the U.S. Forest Service has been encouraging visitors to our nation’s forests and grasslands, to not only enjoy all there is out there, but to play safe and play clean. One example of this outreach effort is the PlayCleanGo: Stop Invasive Species In Your Tracks campaign. PlayCleanGo...

Forestry

The Joy and Value of a Meadow

May 04, 2015 Georgia Dempsey, U.S. Forest Service

Watching the golden glow of the sun alight upon meadow grasses stirs my imagination. My mind conjures up misty visions of the famous naturalist, John Muir, traipsing through the Sierras, admiring Corn Lilies and sedges. A red-tailed hawk swoops into this vision and silently plucks a pocket gopher...

Forestry

25 Years Later, Forest Conservation Programs Still Help Keep Our Working Forests Thriving And Working

May 01, 2015 Senator Patrick Leahy and Under Secretary Robert Bonnie

Patrick Leahy is Vermont’s senior U.S. senator and led in authoring forest conservation programs that he first included in the 1990 Farm Bill, when he chaired the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry. Robert Bonnie is USDA’s undersecretary for natural resources and environment...

Conservation Forestry

Defining Open Space in the San Gabriel Mountains

April 30, 2015 Andrew Mitchell, U.S. Forest Service, Angeles National Forest

The term “open-space” can mean so many different things to an Angelino. It can mean finding a rare open parking spot downtown, finding an open reservation at the newest, trendy restaurant, or it can mean escaping the overwhelming congestion of Greater Los Angeles into its “backyard”: The Angeles...

Forestry

Is the Foothill Yellow-Legged Frog in Hot Water - Because of Cold Water?

April 28, 2015 Stephanie Worley Firley, U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station

For the foothill yellow-legged frog, breeding can be a challenging matter. It is the only true frog in western North America that breeds exclusively in streams, preferring warm stream edges. Its eggs can be swept away with spring rains and rapid currents, so a relatively long breeding season allows...

Forestry

Youth Conservation Corps Programs Make a Difference

April 27, 2015 Chelsea Suydam, Carmen Young, and Kristina Bell, Recreation, Heritage and Volunteer Resources, U.S. Forest Service

As a young man, Tom Tidwell had a summer job with the Forest Service as a member of a Youth Conservation Corps crew. Today, he is Chief of the Forest Service, overseeing an agency of forty thousand employees that honors a mission to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of the nation’s...

Forestry

Secretary Vilsack Announces Partnerships with Farmers and Ranchers to Address Climate Change

April 23, 2015 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

America’s farmers, ranchers and forest landowners understand the threats that a changing climate can have on their operations and on their bottom line. As the world warms, that warming triggers many other changes to the Earth’s climate, including an increase in extreme events. Over the last 50 years...

Conservation

Earth Day Through Indigenous Eyes

April 23, 2015 Joanna Mounce Stancil, U.S. Forest Service, member of both the Shawnee and Cherokee tribes

Earth Day is April 22 and on this unique and special day the U.S. Forest Service is celebrating our nation’s forests and grasslands. Looking from space, the world has been described as the great blue planet. But you don’t need to travel beyond our atmosphere to see the Earth for what it is — a...

Forestry
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