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A bulldozer faces burning conifer trees and flames while creating a fire break.
The last time the Southern Area was the top priority nationally was 18 years ago during Hurricane Katrina.

The South is burning. Over 15,700 wildfires have burned 505,179 acres since New Year’s Day 2023. Persistent dry conditions and high temperatures have created the right circumstances for extreme fire
Two people sitting on a forest hillside looking up the mountain. One person is pointing at something off camera.
An audio journey
Inyo National Forest

* Listen to the audio documentary. Where can we go to be transformed? A change of scenery and a change of pace can help. And we can find both on backcountry trails within national forests. On a cloudy
Colombia Youth Conservation Corps students and instructors at Field Practice on Fire Management with the Volunteer Fire Department of Riosucio, Caldas in 2023.
Forest Service Youth Conservation Corps in Colombia

Newfound confidence. Real life skills. A focus on the future. That’s what some of the 57 recent graduates of the Colombia Youth Conservation Corps (CYCC) report after completion of the eight-month
Wildland firefighters working to clear limbs and other flamable material in preparation for a prescribed burn.
Crews in California treat 4,000 acres of land
Stanislaus National Forest

For a month in early summer 2023, firefighters, caterers, medics and other support personnel flocked to a section of California’s Highway 108 near Pinecrest, California, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains

Skydiver at edge of open door, ready to exit the plane with smoke in the hills below.
A quick commute

It’s that time of year when wildfire activity is increasing across the country. Have you heard of the Bear Fire, Campbell Fire, or the Blakes Fire? Most likely not because the quick response by
An eastern collared lizard on a person's hand.
Eastern collared lizards rebound with partner-assisted intentional forest management
Ozark-St. Francis National Forest

What is green and gold, sports a collar, has four legs but runs on two? It’s not a riddle. Some have called it a “mountain boomer,” but it is actually an eastern collared lizard. Thanks to intentional

Smokey Bear and Gifford Pinchot

August is a uniquely special month for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service. This is because two very important birthdays are celebrated. The first, on Aug. 9, is Smokey Bear’s birthday
Martin MacKenzie, a forest pathologist for the USDA Forest Service, South Sierra Shared Service area, observes brown needles in a young sugar pine in the Stanislaus National Forest.
Observing tree diseases with a stump buster
Stanislaus National Forest

*Listen to the audio documentary below or read the transcript (PDF, 123 KB) When it comes to detecting tree disease, observation is essential. And Martin MacKenzie – a forest pathologist with the USDA

Jim Kaufmann, Director of Capitol Grounds and Arboretum at the Architect of the Capitol, reviews a potential tree candidate.
The Monongahela National Forest finds its third U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree
Monongahela National Forest

Out of thousands of trees, only one gets selected and named the People’s Tree each year. The Monongahela National Forest, however, has a special history with the U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree, as it was
The gloved hand of a fire instructor grips a fire hose.
An experience starting out with fire training during the Wildfire Crisis
Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest

“Okay… who didn’t bring a hand tool?” The man asking is Adam Stoldal, a wildland firefighter assigned to the Heber-Kamas Ranger District in Northern Utah. This week, he is my unit instructor for basic