Three hikers walking past the sandstone wall riddled with holes in Vermilion Cliffs National Monument.

Our Stories

Each day, the Bureau of Land Management employees, volunteers and partners conserve public lands, build our nation’s energy infrastructure and support local economies, advance scientific discovery and much more.  Read our blog stories about the BLM in your community and learn how to get involved.

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Alaska

NED ROZELL: 2014 BLM Artist-in- Residence in Eagle, Alaska

In August 2014, the BLM hosted Fairbanks writer Ned Rozell as its first summer Artist-in- Residence. Rozell, the author of four books, has written a weekly science column for 20 years for the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Geophysical Institute. He’s also a contributing writer for Alaska Dispatch News.Rozell spent his residence from Aug. 22 to Sept. 1, in the Yukon River community of Eagle. There, he worked on an old writing project that had languished for years.
Alaska

BLM's 2015 White Mountains Artist-in-Residence

Late winter is a glorious time in interior Alaska, a welcome relief after the darkness and subzero temperatures of January and February. That’s when winter Artist-in- Residence Deb Horner works in the sunshine and warmer afternoon temperatures, interpreting the public lands of the agency’s White Mountains National Recreation Area north of Fairbanks.
Colorado

Kirk Gittings presents Canyons of the Ancients in a new context

Albuquerque photographer Kirk Gittings, Canyons of the Ancients’ first Artist-in- Residence, focused heavily on the mythological qualities of the dramatic and unique landscape. His primary  tool was a large-format 4x5-inch view camera, which demands a slow and deliberate approach to the craft.
Wyoming

Interns Help With Monitoring

The Buffalo Field Office (BFO) rangeland management staff administers over 400 grazing leases. Grazing allotments vary in size from less than 40 acres to over 26,000 acres.
Colorado

Darting Team helps BLM Colorado keep Little Book Cliffs wild horse herd healthy

Just outside of Grand Junction, Colorado, we work closely with the Little Book Cliffs Wild Horse Range Fertility Control Darting Team to keep the Little Bookcliffs wild horse population at ideal levels. The volunteer advocates began working with the BLM in the early 1980s.
Colorado

Volunteers Help Reintroduce Native Species in Southwest Colorado

Stone flies may again be a natural part of the Upper Gunnison if a research project finds their reintroduction has a high chance of success.Under the project, conducted by Colorado Parks and Wildlife and Western Colorado University, volunteers are collecting stone fly nymphs from the Gunnison Gorge and moving them to BLM- managed lands in the Upper Gunnison. Historically, stone flies were found in the Upper Gunnison, although they are no longer found there naturally.
California

Volunteer Trail Patrols Improve Equestrian Mountain Biking Experiences

A volunteer patrol is making sure horse-riders and mountain bikers get the most out of trails in the San Joaquin River Gorge. The patrol, called the San Joaquin River Gorge Volunteer Trail Patrol, regularly rides trails in the area and is known for its strong interaction with visitors and for supporting local events. For example, Trail Patrol members have assisted with several competitive races and special events, such as the Big Sandy Pro-Am mountain bike race, the San Joaquin River Gorge Ultra Half-Marathon, the Search for Sasquatch Day and the quarterly Family Fun Days.
Oregon-Washington, Medford DO

30 years of environmental education at Table Rocks

What do the dwarf woolly meadowfoam and the vernal pool fairy shrimp have in common? They are both found on top of the Table Rocks in southwest Oregon. If you hike these flat-topped mesas in early spring, you have a good chance of seeing them. This is a highlight for many of the 3,500 school children that annually hike these rocks as part of the Table Rocks Environmental Education Program.
California

Fort Ord National Monument Outdoor Classroom

The BLM Fort Ord National Monument provides an excellent outdoor classroom for environmental education and scientific research. Each year hundreds of school students from around the Monterey Peninsula visit BLM lands for science projects or for special field trips focusing on soil erosion, wetland ecology, or habitat restoration.
Alaska

Sea Squirt Invades BLM Submerged Lands in Southeast Alaska

An invasive marine invertebrate known as “marine vomit,” that can smother native species has been found within Whiting Harbor in Sitka. This non-native carpet sea squirt, Didemnum vexillum, (D. vex) is thought to be native to Japan. It was first detected in Whiting Harbor in 2010 as a result of a citizen-science-marine invasive species bioblitz. Tammy Davis, Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G), invasive species program lead, was concerned along with other stakeholders including local Sitkans and those who work in the marine invasive species world, about the discovery and potential growth and spread of D. vex in Whiting Harbor.
Colorado

VISTA Intern Turns McInnis Canyons National Conservation Area into a Natural Classroom

Last year Ryan McConnell, an AmeriCorps Volunteer in Service to America (or VISTA) intern, helped local students learning English as a second language connect with nature through education and stewardship programs at McInnis Canyons National Conservation Area. The BLM and partner group Colorado Canyons Association sponsored Ryan and turned McInnis Canyons into an outdoor classroom with the help of a Hands on the Land grant from the National Environmental Education Foundation. They partnered with the Dual Immersion Academy, a public charter school in Grand Junction, Colo., and its new STEM program to start the program.