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The Value of Tribal Agricultural Traditions: A Youth Perspective

June 25, 2019 Sally Gifford, USDA Office of Communications

Food sovereignty – the ability to create a self-sufficient food system – is at the heart of the opportunities and challenges facing the Navajo Nation. This spring, Diné College students Tyler Begay, Korrie Johnnie, and Orean Roy were recognized for their exploration of this topic during the American...

Conservation Farming

USDA Continues to Implement Program Changes to Benefit Farmers

May 17, 2019 Undersecretary Bill Northey, USDA

Earlier this week, I was honored to meet with members of the National Association of Farm Broadcasters here at USDA headquarters. These women and men, many with decades of broadcasting and farm experience, are among the familiar voices, faces and bylines we hear and see each day through radio...

Conservation Farming

Rebuilding and Repairing a Piece of History

May 15, 2019 Creston Shrum, NRCS

On any sunny day in Faulkner County, Arkansas, you will find people boating, swimming, and camping at Lake Bennett in Wooley Hollow State Park. This 40-acre lake was named after Dr. Hugh Hammond Bennett, the first chief of USDA’s Soil Conservation Service, today known as the Natural Resources...

Conservation

On Farms and Ranches, Every Day is Earth Day

April 22, 2019 Under Secretary for Farm Production and Conservation Bill Northey

At USDA, we celebrate Earth Day 2019 by offering big thank-yous to farmers, ranchers, and forest landowners for all they do. Every day, we recognize their efforts to conserve natural resources while producing food, fiber, and fuel for people in their communities and around the world. They’re doing...

Conservation Farming

New Science Framework Provides Basis for Conservation and Restoration of Sagebrush

April 16, 2019 Jessica Brewen and Jennifer Hayes, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Forest Service

“Resilience” is the ability to recover from change, or when you think about landscapes, the ability to recover from disturbances like wildfires. A new model takes the idea of resilience and applies it to the natural environment, specifically, to sagebrush. This resilience model is one of the core...

Conservation Forestry

USDA Report is First to Provide Consolidated Data on Conservation Practices by U.S. Farmers

March 12, 2019 Kate Zook, Program Analyst, Office of Energy and Environmental Policy, USDA Office of the Chief Economist

Increasingly, food companies, environmental organizations, and agricultural commodity groups are setting ambitious goals to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from farms. These goals are realized through conservation practices such as reduced tillage farming, and precision technologies, like...

Conservation

I’m Not Going to Turn Another Clod

November 28, 2018 Robert Hathorne and Chad Douglas, NRCS

Plunging his shovel into a wheat field covered in soybean residue, Gary Hula hefts up a mound of crumbly soil with a grin. The county is under moderate drought and it’s just above freezing outside, but the soil in his shovel is full of moisture and riddled with worm holes—sure signs of healthy soil.

Conservation

Food Insecurity And Feds Feed Families

November 21, 2018 Chris Hartley, Acting ERS Administrator

Each year, federal employees across the United States donate millions of pounds of food to those in need as part of the Feds Feed Families food drive. Through this food drive, employees give in a variety of ways – from bringing in canned goods to “gleaning” leftover produce from already harvested...

Conservation

Thank A Farmer This Thanksgiving

November 20, 2018 Bill Northey, Under Secretary for Farm Production and Conservation

As we approach Thanksgiving, it’s important that we show our gratitude for the farmers, ranchers, and forest managers who provide us food, fiber, and fuel. Ag producers feed, clothe, and power our nation.

Conservation

Give Your Farm a Rugged, Natural Look

November 01, 2018 Spencer Miller, NRCS

Many farmers till during the fall. This year, we encourage you not to. Leave it be, let it grow. Save time, money and improve your soil’s health by joining the farmers who observe “No-Till November.”

Conservation