Tapping the Trees! A New Experience for Us!!!
Thursday, March 3rd
Pot Luck Farm - our home for the next 6 weeks |
One of the steps
we always take before agreeing on a house-sitting opportunity is to Skype with
the home owners so that they can decide if we will be a good fit for them, and
vice versa. With our current home-owners, Eileen and Dick, there was an instant
connection that has, in such a short time, become a treasured friendship.
Eileen & Dick - two wonderful people! |
During our
first Skype session, back in October (which lasted for over an hour!!!), Dick
and Eileen told us that they have some sugar maple trees on their 170 acre property and
that some friends in the neighbouring community of Corinth, VT, will be coming over to tap the
trees during our stay. We both got very excited about this and asked if there
would be any chance of us helping out. After so many years of teaching about
making maple syrup, I was extremely happy to be able to cross this off my
ever-growing bucket list of things to do before I croak!
The day
after we arrived, Eileen and Dick introduced us to Ron and his family, who were
collecting sap from trees already tapped. We helped to empty some of the buckets into containers which were then carried to the truck, ready for transporting to the sugar shack for boiling. Ron told us that he had left about 20
trees untapped so that we could be a part of the whole process.
So, on
Thursday afternoon, not long after we had gotten back from our hike up to the
viewing cabin on Wright's Mountain, Ron drove in and asked us if we were ready
to tap the remaining trees on the property. We were delighted - and thrilled
that he would be so willing to take the time to do this with us. After all, we
were a couple of 'greenies'!
Turning on
to the road from the driveway, we located the sugar maple trees that edged the
property and Ron produced a brace and bit - the traditional tool used for
drilling the holes. Holding one of these in my hand brought back memories of using
them during woodwork class (shop) in high school - circa 1962!!! It was a sweat-producing
activity, and Ron told us that after we had completed one tree each, we would
move on to using a cordless drill! Phew!!
In the video clip below, Ron had drilled a hole in the tree using the cordless drill, and then I took
the brace and bit in hand to finish it off, so to speak. Since I had, in actual fact,
used the traditional tool for my first tree, I didn't think it was really cheating!!!
It was acceptable editing... and, from that moment
on, Ron was dubbed as our 'stunt-man'. (He has such a great sense of humour, is
full of fun, and is an awesome person to be around).
Mark and I
took it in turns to drill holes, hammer in the spiles, place the buckets, and
secure the lids. All in all, it took about an hour to tap 20 trees.
+
All the
time, Ron was helping us to decide where the best place would be to drill - and
we also needed some assistance in recognizing the maple trees (though we'd got
it towards the end of the hour!!!) By this time, we had promoted Ron to
Director, and told him that Hollywood had better look out next year for his
nomination for an Oscar!
After we had finished, we drove along the roadside counting all twenty buckets we had put in place.
A couple of
days before this, Dick and Eileen had taken us to Ron's Sugar Shack in the
local township of Corinth, VT.
The front of the tool shed, with firewood ready to go. |
The sugar shack, itself, at the back of the shed. |
He had been boiling sap from before dawn that
morning and we were able to see the three compartments in the boiler where he
supervised the temperature and the progress of the sap-to-syrup process. Inside the shack, the room was full of sugary vapour, and the condensation on the internal walls had a slight sweetness to it.
Obviously noticing our drooling tongues, he poured out some of the syrup into
two small vials for us to taste. Mark immediately made it known that it would
be great to have some more - whereas I was much more restrained!!!
To our surprise
- and immense pleasure - Ron dropped a hot-dog into the boiling syrup and
presented us with a really flavourable snack!! Apparently, he also boils eggs
in the pan when the family gather in the boiling shed.
The Wiener can just be seen in the steam |
We are so
darn lucky to keep meeting the most amazing people in our travels. Ron,
together with Angel, Rick, and their two awesome teenagers were proof that our
luck is continuing to work out for us.
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