Skip to main content
Skip to main content

USDA Blog


Showing: 1 - 10 of 1078 Results
Applied Filters

Beginning Farmer Kick Starts Operation to Provide Local Produce Year-Round

April 02, 2015 Tanya Brown, Outreach Marketing Editor, Farm Service Agency

It’s been two years since Regina Villari, of Sewell, N.J., stepped into unchartered territory. Her idea was so different that no one else in her New Jersey town was doing it. “I was intrigued by the operation,” said Villari. “I always wanted to have my own business and I wanted to do something in...

Conservation

A Bunny's Tale: Protecting New England Cottontail Habitat on Cape Cod

April 02, 2015 Diane Petit, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Massachusetts

Cape Cod’s beautiful seashore, inlets, salt marshes and woodlands are a natural draw for year-round and vacation home owners, and tourists. A boon for the local economy, the associated development is not so good for an elusive little creature: the New England cottontail rabbit. Habitat loss has New...

Conservation

New USDA 'FoodKeeper' App: Your New Tool for Smart Food Storage

April 02, 2015 Christopher Bernstein, Food Safety Education Staff, Food Safety and Inspection Service, USDA

How many times have you gone into your pantry or refrigerator, only to find that what you were going to use in your meal was spoiled? The USDA, Cornell University and the Food Marketing Institute would like to help you avoid that problem in the future with our new application, the FoodKeeper. Every...

Health and Safety

In Conversation with #WomeninAg: Naomi Starkman

April 02, 2015 Rachael Dubinsky and Wendy Wasserman, Office of Communications

In agriculture we know that the work of women in our field reaches far beyond one month out of the year and should be celebrated every day. We got such a great response to our Women’s History Month weekly profiles in March that we will now be expanding to a monthly series. We will continue to...

Conservation Initiatives

iCook Makes Healthy Living Fun for Kids

April 02, 2015 Kelly Flynn, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Childhood obesity has more than doubled in children and quadrupled in adolescents over the past 30 years, leading to increased risks for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and breathing problems. Researchers from the University of Maine have developed the 4-H iCook project to tackle this issue in the...

Food and Nutrition

#AgCensus Gives Nebraska Plenty to Brag About

April 02, 2015 Dean Groskurth, Northern Plains Regional Director, National Agricultural Statistics Service

The Census of Agriculture is the most complete account of U.S. farms and ranches and the people who operate them. Every Thursday USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service will highlight new Census data and the power of the information to shape the future of American agriculture. Nebraska is an...

Conservation

Apalachicola National Forest Hosts International Fire Professionals to Share Ideas on Wildfires, Healthy Forests

December 31, 2012 Susan Blake, National Forests in Florida, U.S. Forest Service

More than 8,000 miles from home, fire management officers from Australia and New Zealand recently visited the Apalachicola National Forest in Florida to share techniques and strategies in the use of prescribed fire. “We see how the use of frequent fire intervals helps manage the different fuel types...

Health and Safety

The Thousand-Acre Woods

December 31, 2012 Jamie Johnson, NRCS Kentucky

For Harlan County, Ky. landowners Jim and Joanne Corum, conservation is a way of life. For the Corums, making the choice to enroll their land in the Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP)—one of the largest private-land conservation programs of USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)...

Conservation

Secretary's Column: USDA’s Accomplishments in 2012

December 28, 2012 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

Over the course of 2012, farm families and rural communities faced a number of challenges. A record drought impacted much of the country and many were impacted by a major hurricane, flooding and severe storms. However, thanks to the resilience of rural Americans, our communities are still going...

Conservation Rural

FAS Program Helps Provide Qualified Teachers in Malawi

December 27, 2012 Kate Snipes, Agricultural Counselor, U.S. Embassy Nairobi, Kenya

School children in the rural communities of Malawi will soon have access to more qualified primary school educators, thanks in part to the Foreign Agricultural Service’s (FAS) Food for Progress (FFP) program.

Initiatives Food and Nutrition Trade