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Hawaii


An American Grown State Dinner - Featuring America's Cut Flower Industry

February 18, 2014 USDA Deputy Secretary Krysta Harden

Last week, President and Mrs. Obama hosted France’s President, Francois Hollande for a State Dinner on the South Lawn of the White House. State Dinners are a way to celebrate U.S. relations with international friends and allies. Past dinners at the White House during the Obama Administration have...

Trade

Breadfruit: Bad News for Mosquitoes

November 19, 2013 Sandy Miller Hays, USDA Agricultural Research Service Information Staff

This post is part of the Science Today feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. Breadfruit has been a hit in Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia for more than 3,000 years because of its many pluses: This...

Research and Science

Forest Service Encourages Youth to Play Outdoors

November 12, 2013 Stephanie Bryant, Pacific Southwest Region, U.S. Forest Service

Pacific Southwest Regional Forester Randy Moore believes that every child should have the opportunity to go camping, take a hike and explore nature. And with the stroke of a pen, he signed in late September a proclamation endorsing the California Children’s Outdoor Bill of Rights as a group of...

Forestry

Hooked on Aquaponics

November 08, 2013 Arthur Neal, Deputy Administrator, AMS Transportation & Marketing Program

If you’re wondering what aquaponics is, you’re not alone. Tracing its roots back to the Aztecs and rice cultivation in South China, aquaponics is a combination of aquaculture and hydroponics – growing fish and plants together in a symbiotic system. Basically, the plants keep the water clean for the...

Animals Plants

Ag Statistician Goes from NCAA to NASS

October 29, 2013 King Whetstone, National Agricultural Statistics Service

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. 2013 is the International Year of Statistics. As part of this global event, every month this year USDA’s National...

Research and Science

Celebrating the Civilian Conservation Corps

April 26, 2013 Tiffany Holloway, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

On a recent cool, crisp spring morning in the mountains of Virginia, the Boy Scouts of America Troop 88 followed in the footsteps of the first “boys” of the Civilian Conservation Corps, the CCC. The first CCC camp, Camp Roosevelt, was established April 17, 1933 at the George Washington and Jefferson...

Conservation

FSA Loans Lend a Hand to California Farmer

March 21, 2013 Paul Lehman, FSA Regional Public Affairs Specialist

Family adversity brought Sam Pesina back home to his family’s Fresno County, Calif., farm. But it was the love of farming that kept him. “When my dad got bone marrow cancer, there was never any question that I would return home,” said Pesina. “My dad wouldn’t have trusted anyone else [to run the...

Conservation

Hawaii Education Program Seeks to Increase STEM Education through Gardening

May 15, 2012 Jennifer Martin, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from the USDA's rich science and research portfolio. Many teachers use creative methods to keep their students engaged in the curriculum they are teaching. Some methods work...

Research and Science

USDA and Hawai’i public charter school partner for local, traditional foods

April 03, 2012 Alton Kimura, USDA Rural Development Hawaii

On the southwest coast of the big island of Hawai‘i, USDA is partnering with Kona Pacific Public Charter School on a project to restore eight acres of land to the ancient Kona Field System of agriculture and then use traditional cultivation techniques to produce traditional foods for students and...

Rural

Forest Service Scientists Awarded $1.4 Million for Restoration Efforts to Save Threatened Plants in Hawaii

February 14, 2012 Sherri Eng, Public Affairs Specialist, US Forest Service

A Forest Service research team has received a $1.4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Defense’s Environmental Security Technology Certification Program to begin research using sophisticated topographic models to identify areas within dry forests that have the most potential for ecological...

Forestry
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