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Sweet Success…
Journal—March 21--Tuesday
The days are getting longer, and the sounds of birds
returning from their southern haunts certainly brighten
each day. The cool nights and sunny days bring the maple
sap to peak flow. This season Margie and I bottled up
just over eight gallons of the liquid gold…
I will relate to you dear journal the highlights of the
syrup season. After a false start near the end of
February, brought on by unseasonably warm weather, the
maples produced less sap flow than in other years during
the March run. I still bottled eight gallons or so of
medium amber grade syrup, but it took more time and
effort.
The preparations are often as time consuming as the
gathering of fine sap.
Due to the deep snow from January and earlier February,
I needed my Snocraft bear paw snowshoes to pack trails
to the maple trees. I like to have well packed and
hopefully hardened tracks by the time the sap flows. My
path was devised to be the most energy efficient on my
dear old body, as I would have to carry the sweet daily
drippings, or pull a sled. I drilled a hole in the maple
outside the kitchen window to help me determine when the
sap starts to run. Each day I would check for a wet spot
of running sap on the side of the tree indicating its
time!
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I cleared the snow off
the roof of my boiling lean-to, and stacked the wood
pile up to the eaves in preparation for the boiling
of sap. My stove or hearth is built of old bricks
hauled from a cellar hole at the old place up back
on the hill. I stacked them in a double thick wall
with no mortar. Wired on the front is an old front
door off an Atlantic parlor heater, and is big
enough to put good sized wood into the stove. There
is a new piece of galvanized stove pipe that
includes an elbow and three straight sections wired
sturdily to the rear of the firebox and to the side
post of the lean-to. My fifteen gallon sap
pan--fabricated at Longley’s in Norway, Maine--sets
neatly onto the open top of the fireplace. I had
them solder a spigot in the side to drain the syrup
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Margie helped me rinse and clean the sap pails,
covers, spiles and the glass jug. She pawed around
underneath the cupboard for the old metal pot she
used to evaporate the syrup to its finished state. I
cleaned out the half dozen metal milk cans and
rigged a harness on the old wood sled to hold one
ten gallon can. Brinker was curious of the
preparations and followed along trying to stay out
from under foot.
I spotted the sap dripping quite freely from my test
tap one afternoon; so the next day we were off and
running. I finished up my morning chores as early I
could, so the packed trail would still be frozen to
get around with my sled. I drilled a hole or two in
each of the maples I wanted to tap. (When I was a
kid, my mother wanted to know what I was doing on
that fine spring day with the little hammer in my
hand. I replied, “I want to tap some trees of
course.” Guess it was a premonition of things to
come). I bored each hole at a slight up angle with a
bit and brace. I drove in a spile and put an eight
penny nail just below to hold up the sap pail. The
lids slid over the top of the pail to keep out rain,
snow, or other debris from getting on the spile or
into the pail. I had to be sure that the taps
weren’t too high, because when the snow melts the
pails could be too high to handle. By late morning I
had the whole setup done, but not before the snow
started to soften up. I wallowed through the last
two or three tree preparations.
I finished lunch on that first day then set a pail on
the maple outside the kitchen window and near the back
steps. I also hang the glass jug on this tree, the one
you probably were wondering about. I like to sit at the
kitchen table and watch the dripping sap make little
rings of disturbance in the glass jug. I like to get a
nice cool glass of sap for my lunch each day during sap
season, so this is a handy place to get the sap.
Sometimes I think I would like the sap more than the
syrup, but sap tends to spoil over time.
My daily routine starts the next afternoon when the sun
starts toward the top of Peabody Mountain, in Albany,
Maine. I trod along on snowshoes to collect the sap from
the trees along the field in the milk can strapped to
the sled. The pails near the road are collected in milk
cans set in the back of “Molly” my pickup. The milk cans
that are filled with sap are consolidated near the fire
place. I fill the pan with fresh sap, strain out insects
and other debris, and start the fire in the stove. It
takes a lot of stoking for the sap to come to a boil,
but when it does the aroma outside the back shed is
wonderfully sweet! I try to keep a boil on through out
the day and night as long as there is sap to keep in the
pan—sometimes the sleep gets a little ragged. When I
think the color and thickness are about right, I drain
off this last gallon or so to finish on the kitchen
stove. Margie will strain the thin syrup through
cheesecloth to clear out any cinders, and gently boil
the syrup to perfection. I sometimes give her a hard
time about being particular about cleaning out the few
bits of charcoal from the fire. I like the faint taste
of smoke in the syrup; as it reminds me of the syrup my
grandfather put up. She assures me that it will be smoky
enough.
The season ran on with some days of overflowing pails to
days with just a piddlin’ amount. It depended on the
amount of warmth and sunshine--both in short supply. I
worked through the snow early on, but ended in the mud
before I was through. There were many long nights
keeping a fire going under the sap pan, and hauling wood
for the fire. There were some times that were randomly
inserted in my sapping life to keep things on the
lighter side. One afternoon I was on my last trip up the
field on my snowshoes, when a snowshoe tip caught under
a piece of crust. I don’t know if it was me being tired,
trying to hurry to get done, or just one of those
things; but I fell down big time! My knees punched
through the snow and I was lying flat on my belly. In
short order I could feel a cold chill run down my spine;
as a leaking sap can splashed a couple of gallons of the
stuff down the back of my wool pants. Fortunately
Brinker was able to lap up some of the sweet sap and
offer his form of a smile at my state. I struggled to
right myself and plodded home soaking wet from the belly
down.
Another morning I was getting ready to fire up the stove
under the full sap pan, when I spied a red squirrel
flitting around in the woodpile near the stove. I had
one arm holding a half dozen pieces of nice oak, so I
quickly scooped up a hand full of snow in my woolen
mitten. I took a couple of good squeezes on the snowball
and felt some water run out. I was about ten paces from
the wood pile when I hurled the snowball at Mr. Red.
Murphy’s Law struck my life the same time the snowball
struck the squirrel. The squirrel had seen me loft the
snow projectile and ducked into a crack between some
sticks of wood in the pile. He was quite high up near
the eaves of the lean-to. My throw hit the exact crack
he ducked into and hit with enough force to push him all
the way through. Yes, you guessed it—he landed plop
right in the middle of the full pan of sap. He, to say
the least, was quite disturbed by my intrusion and his
unplanned bath. The squirrel crawled out, shook off, ran
across the back yard to a tree, and climbed to a sunny
spot to regain his composure. Now I had to decide if the
pan had be emptied and cleaned—sanitation right? Were
there hairs in the sap? Were there squirrel things now
as floaties? What a quandary—I knew what Margie would
say, so I didn’t say anything. As I said before we had
lots of great syrup this season.
I often think of the time and energy we put into this
endeavor, but it is certainly appreciated almost each
day I use a little for my tea or cereal. Margie likes to
make scrumptious baked beans and fudge with maple
syrup—and I can’t forget the whoopee pies!! So every jug
full is certainly a “sweet success”………..
Sweetly Penned’
Eleazer Peabody
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