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Harvesting Trees in the Right Place at the Right Time

October 23, 2020 Ian Fox, USDA Forest Service Southwest Region

Timber sales are an important part of the work to reduce wildfire risk on your national forests and grasslands. However, many of the policies governing how forest products are harvested and sold are decades old, and forest conditions, climate, forest products markets and our workforce have changed.

Forestry

When the Extraordinary Becomes the Ordinary, the Ordinary Become Extraordinary

October 16, 2020 Catherine Caruso, USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Region

On Sept. 7, 2020, Labor Day, the Pacific Northwest experienced a firestorm of historic proportions. For two days, gusty winds drove dry air from the east, down the west slopes of the Cascade mountains. Wind gusts up to sixty miles per hour collided with record-breaking dry conditions, fanning flames...

Forestry

Experimental Forests offer one-of-a-kind remote learning materials

October 08, 2020 Rachel White, Pacific Northwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service

In this time of widespread remote learning, USDA Forest Service Experimental Forests and Rangelands bring the mysteries of the forest to the classroom, even when it’s at home.

Forestry

Transparent Wood Could Be the Window of the Future

October 01, 2020 Amy Androff, Forest Products Laboratory and posted by Robert Westover, Office of Communication, USDA Forest Service

Could looking through trees be the view to a greener future? Trees replacing the clear pane glass in your windows is not a work of science fiction. It’s happening now.

Forestry

Don’t Tell this Heroic Dog Only Cats have Nine Lives

September 25, 2020 Robert Hudson Westover, Office of Communications, USDA Forest Service

When we think of heroic dogs, the fictional collie Lassie and German shepherd Rin-Tin-Tin often come to mind, but life can be more dramatic and amazing than adventurous Hollywood story telling. This is especially true in the case of a highly decorated USDA Forest Service K-9 officer — an 11-year-old...

Forestry

Explore the Science Behind the Magic of Fall Colors

September 21, 2020 Robert Hudson Westover, Office of Communication, USDA Forest Service

With a pandemic raging around the world, drastically altering so many lives, it’s hard to believe that any good can come from such chaos. But during chaotic times it’s important to look at and even study nature. Fall is here and we can learn from what nature is teaching us--from the turning of the...

Forestry

Connecting Veterans with the Lands for which they Fought

September 11, 2020 Alexandra Freibott, ORISE Fellow at the Pacific Northwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service

Millions visit America’s public lands every year to have fun and get away from the hustle and bustle of daily life. In fact, spending time in nature can be truly restorative and research shows that nature and green spaces have a positive effect on human health and wellbeing. Veterans, especially...

Forestry

Oil and Gas Rule Changes Aim for More Productive Forests

September 02, 2020 Andrew S. Avitt, USDA Forest Service, Office of Communications

As a multiple-use agency, the USDA Forest Service works to balance the many uses and benefits the American people expect from their national forests and grasslands.

Forestry

Trillion Trees: Reducing Wildfire Risk, Protecting People and Wildlife

August 27, 2020 Aurora Cutler, Office of Sustainability and Climate, USDA Forest Service

An opaque, autumn haze smothers much of the western United States from the millions of acres burning across forests in the Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountains. Fire size and severity are rising in tandem with record heat, low winter snowpack, decreased summer rains, and abundant forest fuels...

Forestry

An Important Action to Take: Check Your Trees!

August 24, 2020 Jeffrey Davidson, Commodity Specialist for Forest Products, USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

Did you know that USDA has declared August as Tree Check Month? That’s because August is the peak time of year to spot the Asian longhorned beetle (ALB)—an invasive wood-boring beetle that attacks 12 types of hardwood trees in North America, such as maples, elms, horse chestnuts, birches and willows...

Animals Forestry