Skip to main content
Skip to main content

USDA Blog


Showing: 1 - 10 of 22 Results
Applied Filters

Summer Camp Provides Lifelong Environmental Learning for Utah High Schoolers

September 30, 2013 Ron Francis, Natural Resources Conservation Service--Utah

Nature High Summer Camp, an annual high-energy environmental learning experience for high school students in Utah, was held in July at the historic Great Basin Environmental Education Center in central Utah’s Ephraim Canyon. For more than 20 years, several federal natural resource agencies and state...

Conservation

Secretary's Column: Following Through to Keep Our Youth Safe on the Farm

September 27, 2013 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

It’s no secret that agricultural work is tough work – and as America’s farm families know, it can be dangerous. Last year, agriculture recorded the highest fatal injury rate of any industry, with the rate of on-the-job fatality in agriculture nearly seven times the rate for all U.S. workers. Adding...

Initiatives Conservation

PLANTS Database Provides Answers for Vegetative Questions

September 26, 2013 Stacey Mitchell, Natural Resources Conservation Service (Retired)

Recently the PLANTS website crossed a milestone with the uploading of its 50,000 th image. The database, managed by the National Plant Data Team at the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service’s East National Technology Support Center, hosts images of plants that grow in the U.S. and its...

Conservation Animals Plants

Young Texas Trio Brings Technology to the Farm

September 25, 2013 Quenna Terry, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Texas

The tales of young, tech-savvy entrepreneurs launching new ventures out of Silicon Valley are common. But what about three 20-something brothers who live – not in some high tech mecca – but near the small community of Wildorado, Texas, who started a new business venture? The Gruhlkey brothers –...

Conservation Technology

New Mexico Farmers Supply Local Food to Community with Conservation

September 23, 2013 Mark A. Smith, NRCS New Mexico

Everything that siblings Adán and Pilar Trujillo do on their Chimayó, New Mexico, farm connects with the community. Their lettuce and chile peppers feed students at local schools. And they sell their rhubarb, rainbow chard and red Russian kale at the community market just down the road in Española...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Farming

Secretary's Column: The White House Rural Council: Partnering in Support of Rural America

September 20, 2013 Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack

Rural America faces tremendous uncertainty today. Congress has not yet passed a Food, Farm and Jobs Bill, and the current extension of 2008 Farm Bill programs will soon expire. Additionally, thus far, no budget has been provided by Congress to continue funding the Federal government past September...

Conservation USDA Results

FSA Keeps Third Generation in the Dairy Business

September 20, 2013 Sarah Kern, Minnesota Farm Service Agency

When Eric Johnson finished high school, he didn’t see cows in his future. “I wanted a new adventure and I wanted to try something different after being on the farm my whole life,” said Eric. “I tried carpentry and later worked at a nursery as a landscaper laying paver patios and building rock walls...

Conservation

Cover Crops Help Young Farmer Thrive

September 19, 2013 Pattie Thomas, NRCS

At age 8, Russell Wire knew he liked agriculture. That was when he raised some beef cattle for a 4-H project, eventually turning that project into a herd of 40. This natural affinity makes sense—Wire, who lives in northwest Illinois, comes from a farm family. The 28-year-old is actually a fifth...

Conservation

Leading by Example: Conservation in Arizona

September 18, 2013 Beverly Moseley, NRCS

Travel 30 miles south of Alfredo and Sabrina Zamora’s farm in Cochise County, Ariz., and the imposing border fence between the U.S. and Mexico rises up across the horizon. This border county is rural, arid, open land where the Zamoras have spent their lives farming. The couple is well known in the...

Conservation

Renewable Energy Professor Renews Wetlands

September 16, 2013 Jonathan Tokarz, NRCS Massachusetts Intern

When Peter Talmage’s career as a professor of renewable energy and energy efficiency brought him from Maine to a college in Greenfield, Mass. with his wife and son, he knew that he wanted to enhance the beauty of the land that they bought in nearby Northfield and improve it as wildlife habitat. So...

Conservation