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Canoemobile inspires future conservation leaders!

December 29, 2016 Leah Anderson, Communication Coordination, Eastern Regional Office U.S. Forest Service

A young girl looks fearfully at the large wooden canoe bobbing on the water. She steps into the canoe and it moves. She yelps, and is given a reassuring smile by her boat captain. She gets settled holding her paddle tightly, convinced with every movement that the canoe will capsize. The canoe takes...

Initiatives Forestry

Between Two Worlds: Frank Lake heals the land using modern science and traditional ecological knowledge

December 28, 2016 Diane Banegas, U.S. Forest Service, Research and Development

Frank Lake grew up learning traditional practices from the Karuk and Yurok Tribes. He developed an interest in science which led to his career choice as a research ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service’s Pacific Southwest Research Station. As a young man, he didn’t realize how unusual the...

Forestry

Interactive Online Resource to Learn about Climate Change Adaptation

December 21, 2016 Kailey Marcinkowski, Northern Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

The Climate Change Resource Center (CCRC) has recently released a new education resource on climate change adaptation responses to help the USDA Forest Service, USDA Climate Hubs, other agencies, and the general public learn more about responding to a changing climate. The CCRC is an online...

Initiatives Forestry

The Brightest Gem in Washington isn't the Hope Diamond, it's the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree

December 07, 2016 Robert Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

The American public doesn’t have to sneak a peek at the Christmas present the U.S. Forest Service has given them this year because it’s on full display just below the U.S. Capitol dome on the building’s West Lawn. A gift from the Forest Service’s Payette National Forest, this year’s U.S. Capitol...

Forestry

A Dazzling Gem from Idaho Arrives on Capitol Hill

December 01, 2016 Robert Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

You know Christmas is right around the corner when images of the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree being hoisted from a very long tractor trailer show up on your social media apps and on TV. An ongoing American tradition since 1964, this year, the great tree called fondly by its fans “An Idaho Mountain...

Forestry

Southern Landowners Want to Help At-Risk Wildlife Species

November 30, 2016 Robert H. Westover, U.S. Forest Service, Office of Communication

Amid rising numbers of at-risk wildlife in the South, a new report from the American Forest Foundation (AFF) revealed private and family landowners in the South offer a solution to help at-risk wildlife species. Southern forests rank at the top in terms of biodiversity when measured by the number of...

Forestry

Wily coyotes continue to thrive in the Southeast at the expense of deer populations

November 22, 2016 Diane Banegas and Zoë Hoyle, U.S. Forest Service, Research and Development

Coyotes began migrating eastward throughout the latter half of the 20 th Century. Once restricted to the western plains, they now occupy most of the continent and have invaded farms and cities, where they have expanded their diet to include squirrels, household pets and discarded fast food. Land-use...

Forestry

Aviation History Month: Aircraft and Paratroopers in the Forest Service

November 18, 2016 Donavan Albert, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

It shouldn’t surprise anyone that the U.S. Forest Service relies heavily on fixed wing and rotary aircraft to accomplish the agency’s mission. Employees take to the skies for forest inventory surveys, prescribed fire support, firefighting or to get to remote locations. Since 1919, aircraft has been...

Forestry

Digitally discover your public lands using the new Forest Service Visitor Map

November 15, 2016 Donavan Albert, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

There are few better ways to plan your get away on a national forests or grasslands than to use the Forest Service’s online Visitor Map. With thousands of recreation areas, roads and an increasing number of trail systems, you can digitally explore and plan your next adventure from home before you...

Conservation Forestry

Shaping Forests from the Bottom Up: It's All About Root Disease

November 08, 2016 Bruce D. Moltzan, Forest Pathologist, U.S. Forest Service

The old proverb: “You can’t see the forest for the trees” should have continued with a line saying that it’s even harder to see below the trees. Because seeing under trees, their root system to be exact, is how scientists understand and appreciate the things that will determine what we all see in...

Forestry