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NRCS Program Prevents Fuel Spill Disaster in Alaska

March 27, 2013 Molly Voeller and Brett Nelson, NRCS Alaska

When a flood damaged the banks of the Yukon River in Fort Yukon, Alaska, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service stepped in to help prevent a major environmental catastrophe. The citizens of Fort Yukon are predominantly Alaskan Natives who live a subsistence lifestyle, relying on fish from the...

Conservation

USDA StrikeForce: Expanding Partnerships and Opportunity in Rural Communities

March 26, 2013 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

Cross posted from The Huffington Post: Rural Americans face many unique challenges - and every day, the U.S. Department of Agriculture provides assistance to help grow American agriculture and increase opportunity for rural communities. Unfortunately, 90 percent of America's persistent poverty...

Conservation USDA Results Food and Nutrition Farming Rural

Texas High Tunnels Boost Production Possibilities for Urban Farmers

March 21, 2013 Beverly Moseley, NRCS Texas

‘Valley Girl’ and ‘Celebrity’ are just two of the sought-after tomato varieties sold at Elvis d’Agrella’s farmer’s market stand in the summer. And now his weekly customers can purchase those tomatoes well into the winter, because he and his wife, Pat, have constructed a seasonal high tunnel at their...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Farming

Pioneer in American Samoa

March 20, 2013 Nicholas Saumweber, NRCS American Samoa

Sosene Asifoa is a farmer on the island of Tutuila in American Samoa. He raises pigs and grows vegetables such as dryland taro, cucumbers, tomatoes and cabbage. He’s also a regular supplier of top soil to the American Samoa Community College Land Grant Extension Service for their greenhouse...

Conservation

Innovations Mean Higher Quality Cattle for Kentucky Rancher

March 18, 2013 Christy Morgan, Natural Resources Conservation Service Kentucky

Charlie Masters grew up on the farm he and his wife Rose Ann now own in Mays Lick, Ky. When Charlie and Rose Ann bought it from Charlie’s father, John, in 2006, the farm needed some work, but the couple was up for the challenge. She and her husband are always on the lookout for new and innovative...

Conservation

Sun Ranch Helps Protect Sage Grouse in Wyoming

March 15, 2013 Haley Lockwood, NRCS Wyoming

Dennis Sun, owner of the Sun Ranch west of Casper, Wyo. and publisher/owner of the Wyoming Livestock Roundup, is making his ranch friendlier for a small bird that he can neither sell nor hunt. That’s because he wanted to help ensure that the sage grouse doesn’t get listed as an endangered species...

Conservation

Sustainability Is More Attainable with High Tunnel Initiative

March 12, 2013 Amelia Hines, NRCS Georgia

High tunnels are hitting the mark for farmers who sell their produce at the Athens Farmers Market. In the past, the market operated once a week on Saturday mornings between April and October. But now, because some northeast Georgia growers are using the tunnels to extend their growing seasons, the...

Conservation

Deputy Secretary Holds Roundtable Discussion with Tribal Leaders in South Dakota

March 07, 2013 Elsie Meeks, State Director for Rural Development, Craig Schaunaman, State Executive Director for the Farm Service Agency and Jeffrey Zimprich, State Conservationist for the Natural Resources Conservation Service

Last week, Deputy Secretary Kathleen Merrigan led a USDA delegation deep into the heart of Indian Country in South Dakota. All three of us and our teams from USDA’s South Dakota state offices for Rural Development, the Farm Service Agency and the Natural Resources Conservation Service were joined by...

Rural

Grassroots Stewardship Journey Restores Long-Neglected Soils and Pastures

March 01, 2013 Beverly Moseley, NRCS Texas

As a young adult, Henry Day of Millican, Tex. left his family’s ranch and spent years living and working in Houston, returning frequently to visit throughout the years. Upon his retirement, he came back for good and began his grassroots journey to restore the long-neglected soils and pastures on the...

Conservation

Skip Hyberg Honored With Economist of the Year Award

February 25, 2013 Tanya Brown, Writer and Editor, Farm Service Agency

He is a quantitative and scientific force behind the nation’s largest conservation program. Armed with two doctoral degrees, Skip Hyberg is an economist and a scientist who has linked both of those worlds together to more efficiently target the Farm Service Agency’s Conservation Reserve Program (CRP...

Conservation
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