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From Fire to Pandemic Response

February 03, 2021 Alex Robertson, USDA Forest Service

Like many of us, I spent most my life thinking of vaccinations as an item to check off the list at a routine doctor’s visit or as preparation for an international trip. I never imagined that someday every adult in the United States might need access to a critical, life-saving vaccine all at once...

Forestry

When Snow Becomes Deadly: How to Survive an Avalanche

February 02, 2021 Andrew Avitt, USDA Forest Service Office of Communications

Every year roughly 100,000 avalanches sweep down mountains across the U.S., damaging everything in their path and killing 28 people on average.

Forestry

Coho Salmon Thrive in More Established ‘Neighborhoods’

January 27, 2021 Diane Banegas, Forest Service Research and Development

For decades, federal, state, and nonprofit organizations have focused on restoring habitat for the iconic Northwestern coho salmon, a species listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.

Forestry

Fine-Tuned Partnerships Rev Up Trail Recovery

January 21, 2021 Zheer Saeed, Resource Assistant, Forest Service Recreation, Heritage, and Volunteer Resources

Each year, severe wildfires ravage forests across the country, damaging ecosystems, infrastructure and recreation facilities, which are often in need of repair before they can be safely reopened. The 2018 Mendocino Complex Fire--one of the worst in California’s history--devastated more than 459,000...

Forestry

Conservation Program Benefits an Iconic Bird of the Southern Great Plains

January 06, 2021 Bob Sowers, Natural Resources Conservation Service

The lesser prairie-chicken and its habitat are making a comeback thanks to a USDA conservation program. The ground-dwelling bird was once abundant in the southern Great Plains, living in parts of Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Texas. But over the past 150 years due to human migration...

Conservation

Unique Forest Service Program Saves Money and Lives with Innovative Technology

January 06, 2021 Lily Palmer, Enterprise Team

Gifford Pinchot, founding father of the USDA Forest Service, revolutionized American forestry in the late 1800s and recognized the need for science-based forestry. The Forest service embraces innovation, science and technology to this day, and one program has exemplified that spirit for the past 75...

Forestry

Bee Better Certification Program is Buzzing on U.S. Farms, Local Grocers

December 15, 2020 Jocelyn Benjamin, USDA Public Affairs Specialist

Bees are a lifeline for farms producing the world’s fruits, vegetables, nuts and other nutrient-rich foods. Bees pollinate billions of dollars’ worth of crops and play an essential role in our food supply. Pollinators are responsible for one in every three bites of food we eat and contribute more...

Conservation

Stepping Outside the Classroom to Learn Lessons for Life

December 09, 2020 Korey Morgan, Office of Communication, USDA Forest Service

Stop by any trailhead or boat landing on a national forest or grassland and take a moment to ask folks to explain the origins of their love for the outdoors. You will likely hear people return time and again to some formative experience they had in grade school. For some, the smell of the pine...

Forestry

Innovative Finance for National Forests Grant Program Fosters New Ideas, Partnerships

December 07, 2020 Andrew Avitt, USDA Forest Service, Office of Communications

The USDA Forest Service is charged with caring for 193 million acres of the nation’s forests and grasslands and solving some of the most complex land management challenges. Across the country, forests densely packed with trees are at high risk of catastrophic wildfire as well as insect and disease...

Forestry

A Christmas Story Worth Telling

December 02, 2020 Robert Hudson Westover, Office of Communication, USDA Forest Service

Usually when an event as wonderful as the lighting of the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree has its 50 th anniversary, the events surrounding it are packed with people ready to celebrate. That was the plan this year, but the Covid-19 pandemic changed everything and yet nothing.

Forestry