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Irrigation


Acequia de Las Joyas Blooms with Traditional Irrigation Methods

March 29, 2016 Rey Adame, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Spaniards built the Acequia de Las Joyas approximately 300 years ago. The acequia, a community irrigation watercourse or ditch, was the principal method of providing water to the farmers for their crop and rangelands in northern New Mexico. The parciantes (also known as acequia members) worked...

Conservation

A High Five for Innovative Conservation Projects

March 07, 2016 Michelle Banks, Natural Resources Conservation Service

“The Conservation Innovation Grant program has an impressive track record of fostering innovative conservation tools and strategies,” said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack as he announced $20 million in new funding for the program. “Successes in the program can translate into new opportunities for...

Conservation

Innovative Irrigation Saves Water, Boosts Yields in Ogallala Aquifer Region

February 24, 2016 Quenna Terry, Natural Resources Conservation Service

In the Ogallala Aquifer region, each drop of water counts. A group of forward-thinking farmers in Texas are finding innovative ways to irrigate their crops to use water more efficiently. These farmers are working with the North Plains Groundwater Conservation District in the panhandle to study use...

Conservation

A Banner Year for Research: 5 Innovative Projects Aimed at Helping Growers

December 08, 2015 Kim Kaplan, Public Affairs Specialist, Agricultural Research Service

USDA scientists work 365 days to provide safe and sustainable food, water, and natural resources in the face of a changing climate and uncertain energy sources. To recognize the contribution that agricultural science and research makes in our daily lives, this week’s “Banner Year” series features...

Research and Science

Winyan Toka Win Garden Evolves Into Micro Farm

November 18, 2015 Bruce Jones, Acting USDA Rural Development, South Dakota State Director

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 the Cheyenne River Youth Project (CRYP) first began...

Rural

South Florida Drought: Mobile Irrigation Labs to the Rescue

October 19, 2015 Gail Hendricks, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Florida

Widespread drought in California and other parts of the western United States has been widely covered, but earlier this year, drought conditions in southeast Florida were “extreme” and are still considered “abnormally dry” according to the National Drought Mitigation Center. This heavily populated...

Conservation

ARS Employee Volunteers Time, Expertise to Iowa Community Garden

August 05, 2015 Jan Suszkiw, Agricultural Research Service

As an agricultural research science technician at the Agricultural Research Service’s (ARS) North Central Regional Plant Introduction Station in Ames, Iowa, Fred Engstrom’s responsibilities are wide-ranging. They include tasks from managing the station’s nursery and field plots to modifying research...

Conservation

The Morrill Act: 153 Years of Innovations for American Agriculture

July 02, 2015 Sonny Ramaswamy, Director, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

July in America. It is summer time and school’s out. It is about vacations and maybe a trip to the beach. It is Independence Day—the 4 th of July—and parades and fireworks. It is about barbecues, hotdogs, and burgers. 2015 marks America’s 239 th birthday. July is also the month for another important...

Initiatives

Texas Water District, USDA Partner to Show Producers Way to Use Water Wisely

May 14, 2015 Quenna Terry, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Texas

In the High Plains of Texas, water reigns. The area is one of the most productive agricultural regions in the world, making a reliable water supply key to the area’s rural economies. The High Plains draws its water from the Ogallala Aquifer, an underground aquifer that spans eight states. Currently...

Conservation

Regional Conservation Partnership Program - New Partners, New Resources, New Ideas

May 12, 2015 Chief Jason Weller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Last week, I visited with local communities in northern New Mexico. Many of these communities rely on irrigation ditches, called acequias, as their primary water source in an otherwise arid region. These are ditches that were used by their parents, and their grandparents, and their great-grand...

Conservation
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