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Art, Artifacts and Photos Archives

October 02, 2008

Photo of the Week: Shopping Is a SNAP

Art, Artifacts and Photos , Food and Nutrition

A woman grocery shops with her two young sons

Use permitted for promotion, informational and educational purposes of a non-profit nature.

Yesterday, while InfoFarm was celebrating its birthday, USDA's Food Stamp Program was marking a rebirth of sorts.

The federal program is still there, of course, but it hit the scene with a new name and is now known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP.

The name change, a product of the new Farm Bill, more accurately reflects what the program is about, namely, food assistance and nutrition education.

The image above comes from the SNAP Photo Gallery, which serves up a collection of photos depicting nutrition education and outreach messages. These photos, available in both low- and high-resolution, cover food shopping, meals and meal prep, nutrition education and physical activities.

The photos are designed for use by nutrition educators and others involved in administering the program, but in fact, anyone may use them for any non-profit promotion, informational or educational purpose.

The gallery is part of the larger SNAP-Ed Connection site put together by a team of some great folks who happen to sit just down the hall from me.

The site, a treasure-trove of training and continuing ed resources, delivers curricula, lesson plans, research, participant materials and professional development tools for nutrition educators. It also includes an amazing recipe database (which I've actually mentioned before), that lets you use up the last of whatever you've got in the pantry or fridge by searching by ingredients. Or, if you're working under a budget, search for recipes by cost per serving.

If you're prone to weak puns, you might say it's a snap -- but I would never do such a thing.


Posted by Mary Ann Leonard

Added to Art, Artifacts and Photos and Food and Nutrition on October 02, 2008 EST | Permalink

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Lively discussions and different opinions are encouraged within the bounds of respectful civil discourse. Questionable language, personal attacks, off-topic comments, and gratuitous links will either be edited or deleted. Comments are moderated and will not appear on InfoFarm until they have been approved.



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July 31, 2008

Photo of the Week: A Brooding Goat

Animals , Art, Artifacts and Photos , Education

A meat-type female goat

Image is in the public domain.

I look at this picture, and I see a goat. Nothing more.

But to the knowledgeable, to veterinarians or to someone who raises goats, this is a meat goat that doesn't quite measure up.

And that, in fact, is why this image is included in the Animal Science Image Gallery.

This growing collection serves up photos, videos and Powerpoint slides for classroom and outreach learning.

In the case of this goat, that means a description that points out the animal's insufficiencies and the photo's educational value:

Meat type doe that is undesirable in her conformation due to inadequate width. She is also plain about the head and stands on a small foot.
"Plain about the head." Ouch. That hurts.
This image could be used to help students understand the desirable and undesirable characteristics they should be looking for when selecting replacement meat goat does.
In case that description doesn't make it clear, you won't find a lot of warm, fuzzy pics here. (This goat, in fact, was one of the warmer and fuzzier in the bunch.) Instead, you'll see housing and equipment for raising poultry and livestock, animals showing vitamin deficiencies or other abnormalities, diagrams of physiological systems and the like.

Images can be in the public domain, but many are not, though all have been released for educational use. Cite the specified photo credit when borrowing images from this latter group, and you should be fine.

If these pics don't suit you, you'll find more images--of animals or otherwise--at NAL's Arts, Artifacts and Photos page.

But if you'd rather get your goat on, we've got that, too, along with a host of other resources on animals and livestock.

Posted by Mary Ann Leonard

Added to Animals and Art, Artifacts and Photos and Education on July 31, 2008 EST | Permalink

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June 25, 2008

Photo of the Week: A California Wetland

Art, Artifacts and Photos , Natural Resources & Environment , Water Quality

 Restored wetland in Yolo County, California

Photo by Gary Kramer
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service

Do you know where to get great photos of this wild and wonderful world, from wetlands, grasslands, rangelands, and fields to streams, lakes, rivers, wildlife and livestock? What if you want those great photos to be free and with few restrictions on use?

Then head on over to the photo gallery put together by the good folks at USDA's Natural Resources and Conservation Service. You'll be amazed at the variety and quality of their photos related to natural resources and the environment.

Another great thing: you can use the images as you wish. They just ask for a simple photo credit.

The shot above shows a restored wetland in Yolo County, California, an agriculturally-rich area up near Sacramento. Numerous reclamation efforts there have turned acres of farmland into wetlands, conserving the land and protecting the wildlife. Given that the county sits along the Pacific flyway, a major migration route for waterfowl and other North American birds, these efforts are particularly important.

One such project has even been touted as a notable success story in the Wetlands Reserve Program, a voluntary program that helps landowners protect, restore, and enhance wetlands on their property. This program can deliver both technical and financial support, so if you're considering restoring a wetland on your property, be sure to check it out.

So, to get more photos like the one above, browse through the NRCS photo gallery.

But to learn more about the function and value of wetlands, see the wetlands resources from our friends at NAL's Water Quality Information Center.

It's a wild and wonderful world out there. Let's appreciate it.

Posted by Mary Ann Leonard

Added to Art, Artifacts and Photos and Natural Resources & Environment and Water Quality on June 25, 2008 EST | Permalink

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very nice picture

Submitted by: Anonymous on July 1, 2008 06:17 AM



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June 13, 2008

Flowers of Stone

Art, Artifacts and Photos , Plants and Crops

Lily 45, a sculpture by John Jayson SonnierJohn Jayson Sonnier worked as a garden designer for many years. According to him, "Gardens were [his] world." But when fate crossed his path with that of Master Sculptor Constantine Seferlis, his world changed.

Sonnier studied under Seferlis for years, finding a talent for sculpture and discovering an artform that allowed him to give solid yet eloquent expression to nature's wonders.

This summer, you'll find over a dozen of Sonnier's botanical pieces on exhibit here at NAL, with companion prints from the Library's Rare Book collection. Together, the two collections reveal these plants' power and grace -- the rise and fall of a leaf, the curve of a supple flower.

The exhibit, "Floral Expressions in Stone and Print," runs through August 29, 2008. You can catch a sneak preview on the Library's Web site, or more detailed images on the artist's site.

Sponsored by the Library's Special Collections division, the exhibit is free and open the public during the Library's normal hours, Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30.

Posted by Mary Ann Leonard

Added to Art, Artifacts and Photos and Plants and Crops on June 13, 2008 EST | Permalink

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January 11, 2008

Do You Know Where Your Photos Are?

Art, Artifacts and Photos , Copyright

Red arrows point to different spots around Earth's Western HemisphereImagine you're sitting at home watching a football game on television and then, as the game heads into commercial break, you see a pooch that looks very familiar. I mean very familiar. As in, you could look down and see him chewing your shoes at that very moment familiar.

Apparently, that's what happened to Tracey Gaughran-Perez, who contends that a picture of her pug Truman, appropriately outfitted for the holiday season, wound up on an NFL telecast on Fox.

The Washington Post picked up the story this past Wednesday, and with it, gave us a few more examples of folks whose personal photos allegedly ended up in commercial enterprises without their permission: a Texas teen who found herself starring in an ad campaign, a Web designer whose photo made its way to a television skit, a stay-at-home dad who shot of his daughter ended up in an online magazine.

In all cases, the photographers say their images were used without their permission, or were used in ways that violated the license they assigned the work. In turn, the companies implicated have either removed the offending photos, negotiated payment for their use, or lawyered-up. One of the cases cited is still pending in the courts.

When I read stories like this, I process them on two levels -- the personal and the professional.

Personally, I wonder if this could happen to me. Not likely, I think. What are the odds? But then, of course, I'm sure those whose photos were used would have said the same thing just a year ago. Statistics provide comfort only until you're the one in the proverbial million. Best to review the rights associated with photo-sharing sites before uploading my pics.

Professionally, I start regaling those around me about copyright and fair use and public domain. Fortunately, as a librarian I know there are places to go to learn about what's what with intellectual property and copyright. Among the best are:

Of course, let's not forget that sometimes talking with a qualified attorney really is the best thing, so we've got that too.

But if all you're looking for are fresh images for your blog or photos to support your science project, don't go off and steal from Flickr. Instead, check out the image galleries available from Uncle Sam, or, for ag-specific images, those NAL has pulled together.

"Copyright protection...is not available for any work of the United States Government," (17 USC ยง 105), so most of the photos you'll find through those links are in the public domain and may be freely used. However, since some of those images might still be protected by license, please do your part and thoroughly read the disclaimers on each site before use. We'd hate to see you featured in a follow-up story in the Post, or worse, this blog. I don't think I could resist saying, "I told you so."

Posted by Mary Ann Leonard

Added to Art, Artifacts and Photos and Copyright on January 11, 2008 EST | Permalink

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January 08, 2008

Winter Gives Way to Spring...Already?

Art, Artifacts and Photos , Plants and Crops

A barren tree stands out on a snow-covered fieldI'm in agreement with the folks over at GovGab -- winter is a great time to visit a botanical garden.

Here in DC, the U.S. Botanic Garden displays a vivid pallet of greens year-round, and the sun streaming through the glass walls of the Conservatory dispel any thoughts of winter, at least for a time. It's one of my favorite cold-weather escapes.

This month, however, the Botanic Garden has something for those of you who appreciate the diminished light and cold days this time of year. Their current exhibit "Glorious Winter" includes a variety of landscapes that capture the beauty of barren trees and snow-covered fields. Even the gardens pictured, mere stick figures in comparison to the lushness they'll show come spring, are striking, grounding us in the season while evoking thoughts of what's to come.

The Washington Post's garden editor, Adrian Higgins, offered an eloquent review of the exhibit last week, complete with a video interview with Roger Foley, one of the photographers featured.

If you can't get to the Botanic Garden before the exhibit ends January 27, check out a sample of Foley's winter scenes on his Web site. Barbara Southworth, another local photographer, is also a part of the exhibit.

Across town, the U.S. National Arboretum is showing winter landscapes of a different sort, namely, viewing stones that evoke the season. These naturally occurring stones, selected for the way they suggest to the viewer scenes of winter, are joined in the exhibit by pine, bamboo, and plum species, the so-called three "Friends of Winter."

Or be a part of the winter landscape by walking the grounds of the National Arboretum, either on your own or as part of their full moon hikes. (The latter requires registration.)

For other great outdoor activities, review the resources the Rural Information Center has pulled together on winter in rural America. They include a great link on winter recreation and another conveying the challenges of ranching during this season's short days and temperamental weather.

Of course, if winter's just a speedbump on your way to warmer weather, then put this time to use by planning your garden or seeking inspiration at your local botanical garden or arboretum. Nothing gets you through the coldest days like a seed catalog and visions of this year's masterpiece

Unless, of course, it's the Botanic Garden's annual orchid show, which opens February 2. Mark your calendars so you don't miss it.

Posted by Mary Ann Leonard

Added to Art, Artifacts and Photos and Plants and Crops on January 08, 2008 EST | Permalink

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Lively discussions and different opinions are encouraged within the bounds of respectful civil discourse. Questionable language, personal attacks, off-topic comments, and gratuitous links will either be edited or deleted. Comments are moderated and will not appear on InfoFarm until they have been approved.



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October 02, 2007

Where Does Your Food Come From?

Art, Artifacts and Photos , Food and Nutrition

Edwin Remsberg's photo of a tomatillo
When was the last time you really thought about where your food comes from?

Okay, maybe last week's beef recall gave you pause, or the E. coli outbreak in spinach last year pushed you toward kale instead. Or maybe your answer to the question extends only as far as deciding which take-out place to hit on your way home tonight.

I'm with you.

Many of us have the luxury of taking food, and by extension, agriculture, for granted, but then something happens to remind us of this most essential part of our lives.

I had a big shift in thinking when I started working for USDA four years ago. That prompted a small but permanent push toward awareness. But I still get the little nudges as well.

This week it came artfully in the form of a photo exhibit at the University of Maryland titled Georgic Odyssey: Where Your Food Comes From. (“Georgic” is a great GRE word, by the way. Look it up.)

Edwin Remsberg, the exhibit's award-winning photographer, lives on a Maryland sheep farm, but he also takes photos for the USDA and the University of Maryland Cooperative Extension.

Remsberg's images smoothly lure you in and get you thinking about the work, the sacrifice and the beauty that happens daily on farms across America. The exhibit description calls it “a behind-the-scenes view of where our food comes from,” and it goes on to say, “if ‘you are what you eat,’ then this is about who we are.”

I couldn't agree more.

Take a few minutes and browse these images yourself. You can see a sampling on the Union Gallery Web site at the University of Maryland or scroll through all 54 images that comprise the exhibit on Edwin Remsberg's site. And if you're lucky enough to live in the Washington, DC-area, you can catch any of the handful of panel discussions the gallery is hosting in conjunction with the exhibit. Then come back and tell us what you thought. Which image was your favorite? What did the exhibit evoke for you?

And let us know how you stay attuned to what it takes to bring food to your grocery store shelves. We can all use a little help being more aware.

Posted by Mary Ann Leonard

Added to Art, Artifacts and Photos and Food and Nutrition on October 02, 2007 EST | Permalink

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Lively discussions and different opinions are encouraged within the bounds of respectful civil discourse. Questionable language, personal attacks, off-topic comments, and gratuitous links will either be edited or deleted. Comments are moderated and will not appear on InfoFarm until they have been approved.

I've lived in Maryland for four years, since coming to the DC Metro area. To a large extent I know where my food comes from because my husband and I garden, and I can the results. Also my sister is still on the family farm and we (often) buy a quarter beef from her herd. Unfortunately, other things I eat I know too much about ... where they come from and what's been done to get them to the market place. I have worked in environmental and human health risk assessment and groundwater protection. It's not a pretty picture sometimes what happens as a result of intensive food production and processing.

Submitted by: Sally Benjamin on October 3, 2007 05:53 PM

For a good laugh go to www.meatrix.com

Submitted by: Leah on October 26, 2007 12:08 PM

Man, PC gone amok. Who pays for this website, PETA or moveon.org?

Submitted by: Trailboss49 on October 26, 2007 02:28 PM



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