Skip to main content
Skip to main content

FS


Forest Service Helps Restore Fish to Oregon Stream

March 26, 2013 Chris Bentley, Mt. Hood National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

After nearly a century, a five-mile stretch of the Lower Oak Grove Fork of Oregon’s Clackamas River will have native fish swimming year-round in this restored stream once again. Early in the 20th century, the growing communities around Portland needed hydroelectric power. The Oak Grove Fork dam...

Conservation Forestry

Forest Service Innovation is Helping Make the Forever Stamp Stick, Well, Forever

March 25, 2013 Rebecca Wallace, Forest Products Laboratory, U.S. Forest Service

Twenty years have passed since the U.S. Postal Service first started transitioning from lickable stamps to the peel-and-stick squares used today, thanks to the research by the U.S. Forest Service’s Forest Products Laboratory in Madison, Wis. The two agencies first research collaboration focused on...

Forestry

Smokey Bear Hug Warms the Heart of Young Virginia Boy Battling Cancer

March 22, 2013 Michael R. Williams, George Washington and Jefferson National Forests, U.S. Forest Service

Six-year-old Nathan Norman counts Smokey Bear as one of his new best friends. The Rustburg, Va., boy recently met Smokey and a number of wildland firefighters and law enforcement officers from the George Washington and Jefferson National Forests as part of his hobby of reaching out to these first...

Forestry

Innovative i-Tree Spreads Worldwide

March 21, 2013 Keith Riggs, Office of Communication, US Forest Service

When Dave Nowak of the U.S. Forest Service and Scott Maco of Davey Tree Expert Company began collaborating on the creation of a suite of urban forest analysis tools called i-Tree, they imagined that users would be mostly city foresters from the United States. Inspired by users from 105 countries...

Conservation Forestry

Forest Service Recognizes United Nations' International Day of Forests

March 21, 2013 Joanna Stancil, State and Private Forestry, and Amparo Garcia and Robert Westover, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

Try going one full day without using a product derived from a tree. You won’t be able to use a pencil or paper or sit on your couch or at a desk. You won’t be able to check the mail or drink coffee while reading the newspaper.

Forestry

People’s Garden in Ohio Provides Habitat for Native Pollinators

March 21, 2013 Gary C. Chancey, Wayne National Forest, US Forest Service

Next time you’re in the Midwest and thinking of hiking, all-terrain vehicle riding, mountain biking or horseback riding, visit the Wayne National Forest in the hills of southeastern Ohio. It’s there you’ll find more than 300 miles of trails to do those things and much more.

Forestry Initiatives

Tax Guide Updated for Forest Landowners

March 20, 2013 Zoe Hoyle, Southern Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

The updated Forest Landowners’ Guide to the Federal Income Tax is now available online and includes updated information on Federal income tax as it pertains to timber and forest land planning. “The main purpose of this guide is to foster good management of family-owned forest land by providing an...

Forestry

Forest Service Chief Tidwell Delivers Pinchot Distinguished Lecture

March 20, 2013 Tiffany Holloway, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

More than 108 years have passed since Gifford Pinchot became chief of the U.S. Forest Service. Yet today, with Tom Tidwell filling that role in a very different era, some of the same issues persist, along with others Pinchot might not have imagined. “We’re fortunate that we have an organization that...

Forestry

Ski with a Ranger a Breathtaking Adventure

March 15, 2013 Cheva Heck, Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit, U.S. Forest Service

For many skiers, it’s up the lift, down the hill and back again. But a new program pairs U.S. Forest Service rangers and guests at the Lake Tahoe Heavenly Mountain Resort for an hour-long, free, guided ski and snowboard tour.

Forestry

Threatened Sea Bird with a Catchy Name

March 13, 2013 Sherri Eng, Southwest Pacific Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

Marbled murrelets are not the background singers in a ‘60s band. Rather, they are a native sea bird species whose population south of Canada is declining. Like the Pacific Northwest’s iconic northern spotted owl, this small seabird’s nesting habitat may be threatened by the loss of coastal old...

Conservation Forestry
Subscribe to FS

AskUSDA

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