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Alaska's Newest Live Stream Salmon Cam Debuts

August 17, 2015 Teresa Haugh, Alaska Region Public Affairs, U.S. Forest Service

The City of Valdez, Alaska, offers a unique destination for visitors because of the proximity to the Crooked Creek Information Center, the most visited information center on the Chugach National Forest. Situated alongside the creek, a fish viewing platform beckons guests to take in the salmon...

Forestry

Evolution of Agency Revealed in New Website

August 17, 2015 Shayla Mae Bailey, AMS Digital Communications Manager

Over the last ten years, the Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) has transformed as an agency. Of course, the core mission is still there—facilitating the domestic and international marketing of U.S. agricultural products—but how we accomplish that mission is an evolutionary process. Our agency...

Technology

Connecticut's Efforts to Protect a True New England Native is No Illusion!

August 14, 2015 Carolyn Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Connecticut

Pull a rabbit out of a hat. If only it were that simple! For thousands of years, New England has been home to its own unique rabbit – the New England cottontail. The at-risk bunny once lived in a territory that extended from southeastern New York and northward into Vermont and southern Maine. Over...

Conservation

Partners Make Access to Meals for Children Possible Year Round in Kentucky

August 14, 2015 Katherine Belcher, Kentucky USDA Rural Development

Kids in bright summer play clothes come running with smiles and laughter as the white cargo van rolls to a stop near a playground and the rear doors swing open. No, it’s not the ice cream truck. It is something better – the lunch ladies from Kentucky Communities Economic Opportunity Council ( KCEOC)...

Food and Nutrition Rural

Inaugural US Forest Service International Seminar on Forest Landscape Restoration Held in Oregon

August 13, 2015 Lindsay Buchanan, NFS Forest Management, U.S. Forest Service

This blog post was co-authored with Aaron Reuben (International Union for Conservation of Nature) and Kathleen Buckingham (World Resources Institute). Four billion acres of degraded and deforested land world-wide—an area the size of South America—could benefit from restoration. Restoration addresses...

Forestry Trade

Farm to Preschool Helps Healthy Habits Take Root Early

August 13, 2015 Kacie O’Brien, Farm to School Regional Lead, USDA Food and Nutrition Service, Western Region

“May I have more kale chips, please?” asked a four-year old preschooler during one of my first site visits as farm to school lead for the Food and Nutrition Service’s Western Region. The preschoolers I was visiting grew and harvested the kale themselves a few feet beyond their classroom door and...

Food and Nutrition

Improving the Safety of Leafy Greens

August 13, 2015 Kelly Flynn, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Food safety is a top priority for consumers, especially when it comes to the leafy greens in salads. Researchers at the University of Arizona have discovered natural methods to sanitize these vegetables using ingredients commonly found in the kitchen, such as oregano, cinnamon, and vinegar. Plant...

Health and Safety Animals Plants Research and Science

Tackling Rural Child Poverty In Southwest Georgia

August 13, 2015 USDA Deputy Secretary Krysta Harden

In late July, I was thrilled to visit with leaders from across southwest Georgia, including my hometown of Camilla, to discuss how USDA can support their work on the ground tackling issues relating to rural child poverty. In Georgia, the poverty rate is 19 percent, and for children, it’s a...

Food and Nutrition

Red, White and Blue: Sustainable, Domestic Dye for Denim

August 12, 2015 Kelly Flynn, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Blue jeans are a classic symbol of American fashion, but did you ever wonder how your blue jeans got their color? Synthetic indigo dyes are used to give jeans their hue, but that was not always the case. Only two countries, China and Germany, currently manufacture the dyes that are used to color...

Research and Science

Forest Service Celebrates 150th Birthday of Founder

August 11, 2015 Robert Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

The life in which US Forest Service founder Gifford Pinchot was born into wasn’t much different than what millions of Downton Abby fans have come to know through that popular PBS period drama: huge homes, servants and vast expanses of lands where the accoutrements of many in Pinchot’s class. And, on...

Forestry