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Healthy Culverts Make for Healthy Drinking Water

April 10, 2017 Larry Moore, U.S. Forest Service Office of Communication

Culverts provide an abundance of benefits to us every day. They allow us to pass over water, and for fish and wildlife to pass beneath us. And they allow us to go about our daily lives and ideally, for fish and wildlife to do the same. But when they’re badly designed, the results can be disastrous...

Forestry

Un-Paving the Way to Successful Outdoor Education in Urban Settings

September 02, 2014 Chris Strebig and Kate Jerman, Rocky Mountain Region, U.S. Forest Service

Mothers sit and laugh together, shaded by newly planted trees. They look on while their children play and explore in dirt and grass at the new Outdoor Nature Explore Classroom of Warren Village in the heart of Denver, Colorado. A U.S. Forest Service grant of $100,000 and a partnership with the Arbor...

Initiatives Forestry

Inner City Youth Protect an Ancient Oregon Forest Wilderness

August 18, 2014 Brian Hoeh, Siuslaw National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

Inner city youth helped protect an ancient forest wilderness in the Siuslaw National Forest by spending a day removing invasive tansy ragwort. High school students from the Inner City Youth Institute in Portland, Oregon, arrived in the Drift Creek Wilderness near the Alsea River, where Douglas fir...

Forestry

New Web-Based Tool Helps Land Managers Plan for Forests' Future

June 17, 2014 Stephanie Worley Firley, Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center, U.S. Forest Service

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from the USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. From South Carolina’s coastal plain to the North Carolina mountains to the tropics of Puerto Rico to the southern Sierra...

Forestry Research and Science

Forest Service Applauds the United Nations' Second Annual International Day of Forests

March 21, 2014 Robert Westover, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

A world without forests would be pretty bleak. Life as we know it couldn’t exist. In fact it would, more than likely, be a dead planet. That’s because everything we take for granted; clean air and water, abundant wildlife and nearly every product we use in our daily lives, from the roof above our...

Forestry

Woodland Salamanders Prove to be the New Canary in the Forest

March 11, 2014 Walita Williams, Pacific Southwest Research Station, U.S. Forest Service

With the Year of the Salamander now in full swing, there’s no wonder why everyone seems to be talking about these little creatures… they are the new canary in the coal mine when it comes to understanding forest health. Woodland salamanders, small, ground-dwelling or subterranean, and primarily...

Forestry

Enjoy Winter on a National Forest, but Don't Become an Avalanche Statistic

January 07, 2014 Keith Riggs, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

It’s early into the winter sports season and already there are stories of avalanche victims on the nation’s slopes. But there are some steps you can take to keep your name and those of your companions out of the statistics record. The U.S. Forest Service is a partner in the Learn to Ski and...

Forestry

Be Prepared for Winter Driving in National Forests - Your Life Could Depend on it

November 27, 2013 Keith Riggs, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

The Thanksgiving holiday weekend tradition has long included the unofficial kick-off to ski season and a time when families head out to find their Christmas tree, and many times those events involve a trip to U.S. Forest Service lands. Recreationists find some of the best downhill, cross-country and...

Forestry

Veterans Find Training, Jobs with the U.S. Forest Service

November 08, 2013 Keith Riggs, Office of Communication, U.S. Forest Service

The U.S. Forest Service actively recruits eligible veterans for multiple occupations. Currently, veterans make up over 12 percent of the Forest Service workforce. The agency values the experience, commitment and work ethic that veterans bring to the job, as well as their significant skills and...

Forestry

Be Prepared When Visiting our National Forests -- What to do if you Encounter a Marijuana Cultivation Site

September 26, 2013 Keith Riggs, U.S. Forest Service

Two bow hunters recently discovered a marijuana grow site on the White River National Forest, one of the most visited forests in the country. The site, located near Redstone, Colo., contained 3,375 marijuana plants with an estimated value of $8.4 million. Forest Service crews removed the plants...

Forestry
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