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2015 Agricultural Outlook Forum Preview: International Trade

January 15, 2015 Phil Karsting, Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Service

USDA is committed to addressing the challenges of international trade, and providing solutions. As we look forward to USDA’s annual Agricultural Outlook Forum, Feb. 19-20, 2015, in Arlington, Virginia, speakers and attendees will have the opportunity to discuss relevant issues on a wide range of...

Trade

Early-Season Forecast Shows Rain - Not Snow - Keeping Pacific Northwest Wet

January 15, 2015 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Something about January’s water supply forecast confused me. Current condition maps of the Pacific Northwest are a discouraging spread of red dots, meaning the snowpack contains less than half the normal amount of water. But water supply forecasts for the same region predict normal streamflow in the...

Conservation

Secretary's Column: New Approach to Conservation Creates New Partnerships, New Jobs

January 14, 2015 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

When USDA unveiled the new Regional Conservation Partnership Program last year, I said that this effort would pioneer a new era of conservation. As of today, the program is doing just that—leveraging an unprecedented three-quarters-of-a-billion dollar investment in projects to preserve clean land...

Conservation

South Carolina Features Supreme Chicken Sandwich in School Lunch

January 13, 2015 Samantha Benjamin-Kirk, FNS Southeast Regional Office Farm to School Program Lead

It’s not surprising that chicken, the most popular meat for kids, is being served in school cafeterias across the nation. However, in Columbia, S.C., locally sourced chicken has taken center stage on school meal trays in an effort to increase the state’s Farm to School programming. South Carolina’s...

Food and Nutrition

Managing Waste for an Expanding Dairy Herd

January 13, 2015 Christy Morgan, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Kentucky

Jonathan Gaskin grew up on a beef cattle and grain farm in Adair County, Kentucky. And at 12, Gaskin was milking cows for the farm next door. The neighbor sold their farm when he was 18, and at that time, he always knew he wanted to have a dairy farm – he just didn’t realize he would buy that same...

Conservation

USDA... Helping Produce Businesses Meet Consumer and Retailer Demand

January 13, 2015 Lorenzo A. Tribbett, AMS Fruit and Vegetable Program Specialty Crops Inspection Division Director

Ensuring that its food meets the demands of its retailers and the consumers who eat it is essential to the success of any produce business. This builds consumer trust and helps retailers confidently supply the food we all eat. To help out on this front, the USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS...

Food and Nutrition

U.S. Farms, Large and Small

January 13, 2015 Robert Hoppe, Economic Research 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. Describing the structure of the U.S. farm sector is challenging, because farms vary widely in size and other characteristics...

Research and Science

Partnership to Help Sage-Grouse Continues to Grow

January 12, 2015 Byrhonda Lyons, NRCS Montana

When many different groups come together for a common goal, the impacts can be tremendous. That’s the case for the sage-grouse, an at-risk bird in the American West. Since 2010, over 1,100 ranches have teamed with the Sage-Grouse Initiative (SGI) and conserved 4.4 million acres across 11 western...

Conservation

Investing in the Future of Maine's Great Outdoors with Renewable Energy

January 12, 2015 Virginia Manuel, Maine State Director, USDA Rural Development

Recently I had the privilege of joining Matthew Hancock and his team at Mt. Abram, a unique, sustainable ski area located in the mountains of Western Maine. An immense 803 panel solar photovoltaic system greeted gatherers as they drove in, the result of a Renewable Energy for America Program (REAP)...

Rural

Archaeological Heritage of Colorado's Ute Tribe Part of National Forests' History in Rocky Mountain Region

January 09, 2015 Michael Stearly, Rocky Mountain Region, U.S. Forest Service

There are small piles of fallen wooden timbers on national forests in the Rocky Mountain Region that tell a story of the area’s past. They are part of aboriginal wooden structures known as wickiups, a conical-shaped dwelling used by native people. These relics are known to be part of the Ute...

Forestry

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