Skip to main content
Skip to main content

FS


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

Partnerships Help Accelerate Forest Restoration, Increasing Benefits, Decreasing Threats

November 19, 2015 Ellita Willis, Washington Office, U.S. Forest Service

We cannot care for public forests and grasslands alone—the land benefits the most when communities join us and provide input to help shape forest plans. The U.S. Forest Service takes pride in being part of the communities we serve, whether by managing the land to be resilient to disturbance or as...

Forestry

Wildland Fires Recognize No Borders

November 17, 2015 Kaari Carpenter, Public Affairs Specialist, U.S. Forest Service

An uncontained forest fire burning in Greece, Germany, or the U.S. looks basically the same: they are all destructive. For this important reason, the U.S. Forest Service has a well-established international leadership role in wildland fire management. The Fire and Aviation Management or FAM’s...

Forestry

Using Agroforestry to Help Pollinators Help You

November 12, 2015 Kate MacFarland, USDA National Agroforestry Center

Today, farms in the U.S. are larger and have less nearby habitat to support bees than in the past, yet the need for pollinators in rural landscapes has never been greater. In light of concerns over pollinator declines, a Memorandum was released by President Obama on June 20, 2014, Creating a Federal...

Forestry

Collaboration is the Name of the Game in the Northwoods

November 12, 2015 Stephen Handler, U.S. Forest Service

USDA celebrates National Native American Heritage Month in November with a blog series focused on USDA’s support of Tribal Nations and highlighting a number of our efforts throughout Indian Country and Alaska. Follow along on the USDA blog . When you are faced with a big problem, it helps to have...

Forestry

A Giant Christmas Tree's 4000 Mile Journey from Alaska to Capitol Hill

November 09, 2015 Robert Westover, U.S. Forest Service

For over 90 years the majestic Lutz spruce stood silently in the Chugach National Forest near Seward, Alaska. Hidden from most tourists, except intrepid hikers, the spruce, as high as a seven story building, would have aged in obscurity but for a stroke of luck: this Lutz spruce was chosen among the...

Forestry

Volunteers Put Down Roots to Keep Kenai Peninsula Stream Banks Healthy

November 09, 2015 Jane Knowlton, U.S. Forest Service

The river banks of the Upper Kenai and Russian Rivers in Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula are known to attract some of the most avid fishermen. In the last couple decades, they have also lured a growing number of citizen volunteers who are equally passionate about an environmental stewardship mission to...

Forestry

Bison are back and here to stay at the Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie

November 02, 2015 Robert Westover, U.S. Forest Service

Guest Post by Hannah Ettema of the National Forest Foundation. It was like stepping back through time on the Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie. Some 200 years ago, when bison prominently roamed the Illinois landscape, kicking up dust as they ran in the herd before settling against a back-drop of...

Forestry
Subscribe to FS

AskUSDA

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