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Showing: 31 - 40 of 51 Results

Cover Crops: Agriculture's Hero

March 31, 2015 Elizabeth Tatum, Agricultural Marketing Service Botanist

Cover crops are the real heroes in the world of agriculture. Their job starts after a field is harvested and ends just before the next season’s crop is planted. Expectations for cover crops are high because if they don’t produce, the next crop may suffer. After crops are harvested each year...

Conservation

Mimic Nature to Harvest Benefits of Healthy Soil, Expert Says

December 03, 2013 Michelle Banks, Natural Resources Conservation Service

In the minds of many, a freshly tilled field is picturesque – clean and ready for the next planting. But according to a soil health expert, what looks good to the eye, isn’t always good for the soil – or a farmer’s bottom line. Thursday, on World Soil Day, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation...

Conservation

World Ag Expo Invites Visitors to Experience Agriculture

February 16, 2011 Jonathan Groveman, NRCS California

On February 8, I was excited to work at the World Ag Expo, billed as the largest agricultural trade show in the world. As a newcomer to such events, when I saw the huge line waiting to get through the main gates on opening day, the first thing that popped into my mind was the word “incredible.”

Conservation

American Chestnut Trees Return to the Hoosier National Forest

May 13, 2011 Teena Ligman, Hoosier National Forest

Once a prominent phenomenon in southern Indiana, Bedford just experienced the first re-planting of American chestnut trees on the Hoosier National Forest in partnership with Purdue University and the U.S. Forest Service’s Northern Research Station.

See Honeybees at Work: USDA Launches BeeWatch

May 15, 2014 Annie Ceccarini, Program Manager, The People’s Garden Initiative

At the ribbon cutting of the USDA Headquarters People’s Garden in April 2010 plans were already in place to install a beehive on the roof of the Whitten Building as well as a "bee-cam" so anyone anywhere could learn about bee activity. USDA’s newest ‘buzzing’ residents were welcomed on Earth Day but...

Initiatives

Be Prepared When Visiting our National Forests -- What to do if you Encounter a Marijuana Cultivation Site

September 26, 2013 Keith Riggs, U.S. Forest Service

Two bow hunters recently discovered a marijuana grow site on the White River National Forest, one of the most visited forests in the country. The site, located near Redstone, Colo., contained 3,375 marijuana plants with an estimated value of $8.4 million. Forest Service crews removed the plants...

Forestry

South Dakota Local Foods Conference Supports South Dakota Producers and Resource Providers

December 07, 2012 South Dakota USDA Rural Development Coordinator Christine Sorensen

The second annual South Dakota Local Foods Conference was held recently to continue the dialogue on local foods among producers, consumers, farmer’s markets, retailers, schools and others. The conference provided attendees from across the state two days of breakout sessions, networking, and...

Food and Nutrition Farming Rural

Partnering in Virginia to Restore an Important Southern Ecosystem

October 06, 2011 Barbara Bowen, NRCS Virginia

Like the mythical phoenix, the very real longleaf pine is rising from the ashes of near-extinction to reclaim its native range in Virginia with the help of committed partners and landowners like Bill Owen. A musician by profession, Owen is a conservationist at heart who still lives in the family...

Conservation

A Clear Answer to Clean Water

June 07, 2012 Dave White, Chief of the Natural Resources Conservation Service

Cross posted from the White House Council on Environmental Quality blog: How important is water? Well, it’s not a question I have to think too hard about. What I can tell you is that without it, there wouldn’t be any humans or critters roaming the earth.

Conservation

Forest Service Recovery Act Funds Benefit Rhode Island

March 21, 2012 R. "Fitz" Fitzhenry, Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry, U.S. Forest Service

Two years of work is nearly complete on a project to eradicate what is considered one of the worst invasive exotic plants in parts of the eastern U.S. The Japanese knotweed grows in thick, dense colonies that completely crowd out native species. Forest Service Recovery Act funds helped to tackle the...

Forestry