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Conservation


Secretary's Column: Energy Efficiency and the Food, Farm and Jobs Bill

August 16, 2013 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

This week, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced more than 630 new projects across the country under the Rural Energy for America Program (REAP). These new projects will help producers and businesses boost their bottom line, while increasing America’s energy security and protecting our...

Energy Conservation

With NRCS Help, Texas Man Gets Closer to Dream of Owning "Ranching Place"

August 06, 2013 Beverly Moseley, NRCS

With each swing of the ax and cut of the chainsaw, David Pi was clearing the way for his dream of one day having what he calls a “ranching place.” In 2009, he bought 39 heavily wooded acres about an hour east of Houston that he envisioned opening up into pastures for the cattle he dreamed of owning...

Conservation

Forest Service Employee Helps Georgia School Achieve National Green Ribbon Status

August 06, 2013 Max Silvera, Southeast Region, and Jane Knowlton, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

In Acworth, Ga., children at Ford Elementary School live almost every child’s dream – outdoor classrooms and science labs in a butterfly garden. The school was selected as one of 64 U.S. Department of Education’s National Green Ribbon Schools for 2013. The department’s recognition program honors...

Forestry Research and Science

Conservation Tour Showcases an Awe-Inspiring Partnership

August 02, 2013 Jody Christiansen, NRCS Illinois

A recent tour in Livingston, Ill. showcased the successes a powerful partnership has had in the Indian Creek Watershed. The 6 th Annual Conservation in Action Tour was organized by the Conservation Technology Information Center to highlight community efforts in the watershed taking place under the...

Conservation

Providing Water for Cattle on the Navajo Nation

July 31, 2013 Barry Hamilton, NRCS Utah, Yahaira Lopez, NRCS NHQ, and Sarah Graddy, NRCS NHQ

Two chapters of the Navajo Nation in Utah are getting new livestock wells, thanks to USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service. Members of the Teec Nos Pos and Red Mesa Chapters use wells drilled deep into the desert floor to water their 1,000 or so cattle. (A chapter is both a rural community...

Conservation

Easement Ensures Family Farm Will Be Preserved

July 25, 2013 Jason Johnson, NRCS Iowa

Editor’s Note: As USDA shares stories of program accomplishments from across the country, Secretary Vilsack continues to remind Americans of the importance of the Farm Bill to many of these efforts. The success of the Wetlands Reserve Program in Iowa and across the nation is another reminder of the...

Conservation

NRCS Works with Tribe to Revive Deep-rooted Ag Practices

July 23, 2013 Spencer Miller, NRCS

Native American agriculture techniques once dominated the continent, but after the arrival of Europeans, many of those traditions were nearly lost. USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service is working with tribal communities and ethnobotanists to restore some of these techniques and crops. NRCS...

Conservation Animals Plants

StrikeForce in Action with Nevada's Native American Tribes

July 17, 2013 Leslie Wheelock, Director, USDA Office of Tribal Relations

Earlier this summer, I had the opportunity to participate in the National Congress of American Indian’s (NCAI) mid-year meeting in Reno, Nevada. The NCAI meeting was a warm and familiar place for me, as I recently left a position as NCAI’s Director of Economic Development to assume my current...

Rural

Grazing Land Management Helps an Arkansas Farmer Reduce Effects of Extreme Drought

July 10, 2013 Jeremy Huff and Reggie Jackson, NRCS Arkansas

Cattle producers across Arkansas faced many challenges during the extreme drought of 2012. Luckily, grazing management strategies helped farmers like Randolph County’s Dale Courtney alleviate the drought’s effects. With the assistance of USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service, Courtney...

Conservation

Wetland Conservation: Good for Nature, Good for the Soul

July 08, 2013 Michelle Banks, NRCS

Maybe it’s Murry Moore’s profession as a funeral director that inspires him to put tired land to rest, but his restoration efforts of nearly 700 acres on the banks of the Obion River in western Tennessee has ensured a peaceful home for wildlife. In the early 1950s, Moore’s parents bought the tract...

Conservation
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