When we first came to Pennsylvania a friend or ours, Mike Horning, described to us how maple syrup was made. I was flabbergasted that maple syrup actually came straight from a tree. Nothing is added to it, all you have to do is collect maple sap (i.e., milk the tree), boil it down until it is thick, and "Whala" you have syrup. I thought wow, I have to try that. Maple syrup runs during the late winter/early spring when temperatures creep below freezing at night and above freezing during the day. I was speaking with Mike about a week ago and said that I wanted to try to make some syrup. Mike is very efficient at finding things so we headed off to a True Value hardware store where we found and purchased maple sap spiles. The spiles are placed about 1 1/2 inches into the tree and they allow the sap to run down the spile into our buckets. We also needed buckets to hang on the spile. On the way back from the hardware store we found a recycle bin and went dumpster diving for milk cartons and other miscellaneous jugs. We found a bottomless supply of containers. I emailed the owner of the wooded property at the end of my street and asked him if I could tap his trees for syrup. Pamela suggested that he might be a tree hugger and wouldn't want me to damage his trees. Well, tapping a maple tree doesn't harm the tree in anyway. Also the owner of the property is a partner in a company called "Lezzer Lumber." Needless to say, he had no problem with me tapping his trees. Now the hard part, how to identify a maple tree during winter when they don't have leaves. I unsuccessfully tried this on my own. I told Mike that I was a "Padawan Learner" and needed his expert advice. We set off into the woods and Mike showed me the "Scientific Method" for discovering maple trees. Drill a hole in it and if it drains sap then its a maple tree. |