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Land-Marking: Returning to 9/11 Living Memorials Projects and to the People who Continue to Shape, Create and Attend to their Meaning

September 11, 2015 Erika S. Svendsen and Lindsay K. Campbell, Northern Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

Living memorials serve as a reminder of fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, neighbors and friends—but also of the power of community to reflect, rebuild and renew. Our research suggests that living memorials demonstrate the role of nature in contemporary times not only as...

Forestry

Being Fire Wise is an Easy Way to Prepare for Fire Season

September 10, 2015 Robert Westover, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

We’ve all seen the heart-wrenching images on TV: lives and property destroyed by wildland fire. And, this fire season, with over eight million acres burned, we are seeing these images more frequently. Most of us think nothing can be done to protect a home from the onslaught of a raging wildland fire...

Forestry

Responding to Oak Wilt and Climate Change on the Menominee Nation Forest

September 09, 2015 Arthur Blazer, Deputy Undersecretary, Natural Resources and Environment

Standing in a disturbed patch of forest, Menominee forester Jeff Grignon looks around and explains, “My role is to regenerate the forest, maintain the forest, create diversity, and look toward the future.” This task is becoming increasingly challenging as growing forest health issues intersect with...

Conservation Forestry

Forest Employees Partner to Provide Improved Access to Historic Cemetery

September 04, 2015 Denise Ottaviano, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Since the 1800s, heirs of the San Joaquin del Rio de Chama Land Grant in northern New Mexico have been tending to graves and religious sites in a small cemetery at the top of a mesa in the Chama River Canyon. For at least three decades, they had to travel by foot up the hill to reach the cemetery...

Forestry

Working Together to Restore the Colorado Front Range

September 02, 2015 Jennifer Hayes, Rocky Mountain Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

It started with a call from a concerned landowner living on Pine Country Lane, nestled in the foothills just west of Denver. The landscape spread out before them was scarred from previous high-severity fires, the homeowners told their local Conservation District. Their home was sitting at the top of...

Forestry

Apalachicola National Forest Restores National Historic Landmark

August 28, 2015 Caroline Roth, National Forests in Florida, U.S. Forest Service

The drive to Fort Gadsden’s Historic Site on the Apalachicola National Forest is something reminiscent of a nature documentary. Towering pines line the highway while vibrant wildflowers bloom throughout the fields. Local volunteers and Apalachicola National Forest employees are busily working in the...

Forestry

Alaskan High School Students Learn Valuable Skills at "Fish Boot Camp"

August 27, 2015 Nat Gillespie, Assistant National Fisheries Program Leader, U.S. Forest Service

This post was co-authored with Andrew Thoms, Executive Director of the Sitka Conservation Society . “The thing that our forests grow best is salmon!” is the local phrase that a visitor is most likely to hear when visiting some of the 32 communities that live near the Tongass National Forest of...

Forestry

Student Climate and Conservation Congress: Bright Young Minds

August 25, 2015 Joanna Mounce Stancil, Senior Advisor for State and Private Forestry

This year, for the first time, the Forest Service partnered with the Green School Alliance and their principle partner the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) in support of the Student Climate and Conservation Congress (Sc3). Held June 21-27 on the beautiful campus of the FWS’s National Conservation...

Forestry

100 Years of U.S. Forest Service Research and Development

August 21, 2015 Tom Tidwell, Chief, U.S. Forest Service

U.S. Forest Service Research and Development celebrates a century of existence this year and while we don’t all get the opportunity to work directly with our researchers and scientists, we all benefit from their contributions. We are extremely fortunate as an agency to have our own Research &...

Forestry Research and Science

Restoring Appalachian Soils to Restore the Forests

August 19, 2015 Mary Beth Adams, Northern Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

The land of forest-covered hills, mountain music and coal has a lesson for restoration: healthy forests require healthy soils. The forests of Appalachia, a region that extends from southern New York to Georgia, are considered to be among the most diverse temperate deciduous forests in the world...

Forestry

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