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Giana and Dan Van Nice are pretty comfortable in front of a camera, with more than 60 YouTube videos to their credit, but their latest on-screen venture broke new ground.
The Van Nicesâ Blue Dog Farms was featured in the Pennsylvania Farm Showâs first-ever virtual farm tour, which aired Jan. 9 on the Farm Showâs Facebook page and the Pennsylvania Cable Network.
A video crew visited the farm in November to document the Van Nicesâ daily routine.
âWe had kind of a nice little introductory call with the head producer,â Giana Van Nice said. âAnd then he sent a camera crew out. And by âcamera crew,â it was one guy, a really nice kid named John. We just walked the farm with him.â
Sara Fern Fitzsimmons, TACF Director of Restoration and Northern Appalachian Regional Science Coordinator
The American chestnut (Castanea dentata) was once found throughout the forests of the Appalachian Mountains and was a primary component of Pennsylvania’s forests. In the 1800s, plant importation brought with it a devastating fungal disease that all but eliminated the American chestnut from its original range. Researchers at Penn State have been on the forefront to restore this species, exploring the many facets required for the reintroduction of disease-resistant populations.
The Appalachian forest ecosystem is vastly different now than it was over 100 years ago when the American chestnut was often the dominant species of a stand. Invasive and exotic vegetation, introduced diseases and pests, ravenous and excessive deer herds, overdevelopment, and threats of climate change face a species made effectively dormant by introduced disease.
Sara Fern Fitzsimmons, TACF Director of Restoration and Northern Appalachian Regional Science Coordinator
The American chestnut (Castanea dentata) was once found throughout the forests of the Appalachian Mountains and was a primary component of Pennsylvania’s forests. In the 1800s, plant importation brought with it a devastating fungal disease that all but eliminated the American chestnut from its original range. Researchers at Penn State have been on the forefront to restore this species, exploring the many facets required for the reintroduction of disease-resistant populations.
The Appalachian forest ecosystem is vastly different now than it was over 100 years ago when the American chestnut was often the dominant species of a stand. Invasive and exotic vegetation, introduced diseases and pests, ravenous and excessive deer herds, overdevelopment, and threats of climate change face a species made effectively dormant by introduced disease.