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Honoring my Teachers, Sharing Traditions on the San Carlos Apache Reservation

April 22, 2016 Deputy Under Secretary Arthur "Butch" Blazer, Natural Resources and Environment

With more than 40 years of professional experience working in the field of natural resources, I am sometimes asked to share the personal outdoor experiences I had as a tribal member growing up on my reservation. When the request involves children, and those children are Native American, I am...

Conservation Initiatives Forestry

Job Corp Youth Saving America's Garden Heritage

April 21, 2016 Alicia D. Bennett, U.S. Forest Service

It’s spring! And while gardeners typically scrutinize seed catalogs for what crops to plan, Boxelder Job Corps Civilian Conservation Center students are working to save America’s diverse, but endangered, garden and food crop heritage for future generations by collecting, saving and sharing heirloom...

Forestry

Partnership Protects Public Access in a Landscape Fit for a King

April 19, 2016 Nancy Parachini, U.S. Forest Service

A stunning landscape called Castle Valley, near Lake Tahoe, is the heart of one of the most heavily-used backcountry recreation areas in the northern Sierra Nevada region of California. The 400-plus acre valley is also a primary access point to the Pacific Crest National Scenic Trail that winds its...

Forestry

USDA Engages Public through Crowdsourcing and Citizen Science

April 15, 2016 Samuel Crowell, AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow, USDA Office of the Chief Scientist

Recently, USDA participated in the White House launch of the Federal Crowdsourcing and Citizen Science (CCS) Toolkit. By providing federal employees with information about developing CCS activities, the Toolkit will eventually allow the Federal government to design more programs that ask citizens to...

Research and Science Technology

More than a Pretty View for rural America

April 15, 2016 Mike Illenberg, U.S. Forest Service

This may sound like a cliché, but our job at the U.S. Forest Service is to do something every day to make your life better. And we mean it. Our work safeguards clean air, clean water, and beautiful, resilient and productive forests and grasslands. These effects of healthy national forests and...

Forestry

New Quarter Showcases the Shawnee National Forest

April 14, 2016 Sue Hirsch, US Forest Service

The Shawnee National Forest is one of few places in Illinois where you will find large open spaces to explore and be immersed in nature. One of its special places is the Garden of the Gods Recreation Area. Each year several hundred thousand visitors are drawn to the strange and beautiful rock...

Forestry

Now That Was A Sweet Ride!

April 12, 2016 Matthew Meyer, U.S. Forest Service

Your face is dusty. Your All-Terrain Vehicle (ATV) is muddy. Your adrenaline is at an all-time high. You have just finished riding one of your favorite trails on the U.S. Forest Service’s Grand Mesa National Forest and couldn’t be happier. But, do you ever wonder how all these miles of off-highway...

Forestry

Chinese Cultural History in the American West Put in Spotlight by Forest Service, Partners

April 07, 2016 Fred Wong, U.S. Forest Service

The often-forgotten footprints of Chinese immigrant laborers cover the floor of America’s national forests, railroads and mines. These laborers left behind physical and cultural remnants of the past woven into the fabric of our country. The U.S. Forest Service is partnering with The Chinese American...

Forestry

Native American Students Mentored by Forest Service Scientists

April 05, 2016 Diane Banegas, U.S. Forest Service

The U.S. Forest Service is working with The Wildlife Society to give Native American students a chance to work as research assistants for Forest Service scientists. Forest Service Research and Development funding provides stipends for living expenses for college juniors, seniors and graduate...

Forestry

Silent Cultural Symbols that Speak Volumes

April 01, 2016 Robert Hudson Westover, U.S. Forest Service

Quietly waiting for you in our national forests and grasslands are what remains of long past civilizations and cultures. Some of these sites still have direct spiritual or cultural meaning to folks today while others are a complete mystery of what once was of a vanished people. Yet, in both cases...

Forestry
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