Maine Maple Sunday is the perfect day to be driving in the Pine Tree State. At least a dozen sugaring sites are joining in the 30th annual celebration, set for 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 23, 2014. (Check the website closer to the date for a more complete listing.)
Sponsored by the Maine Maple Producers Association, the day includes sugarhouse visits, sugar bush tours and demonstrations on making maple syrup. There'll be plenty of maple treats to sample and buy, including maple cotton candy, maple sausage, ice cream with maple syrup and more.
Here are some of places to visit:
Luce's Saphouse
Rockwall Maple Farm
Smith Brothers Maple
Little Pond Sugarhouse
Strawberry Hill Farms
Wilson Family Maple
Bacon Farm
Old Fort Western
Hill Top Farm
Mike's Maple Sugar House
Sugar Brook Maple Farm
Linwood Acres
Check out a video of a past Maple Sunday:
Friday, December 13, 2013
Monday, February 18, 2013
Maple Syrup Time in New York State

The Farmers' Museum, 5775 State Highway 80 (Lake Road), Cooperstown, New York (map), holds "Sugaring off Sundays" each Sunday in March.
The event March 3, 10, 17, 24, and 31 features historic and contemporary sugaring demonstrations, children's activities and more. A full pancake breakfast is served from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. with other activities scheduled 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Have a taste of “jack wax” — hot maple syrup poured over snow.
Cost for ages 13 and up is $9; ages 7–12, $5, 6 and under are free -- and this includes full breakfast. Reservations are not required.
Two Maple Weekends also are scheduled, in which producers from across the state welcome families to their farms to experience firsthand how real maple syrup and other related products are made.
Maple Weekends will be held March 16 and 17 plus March 23 and 24, 2013, at 123 locations throughout upstate New York (see the map).
(Photo courtesy of Maple Weekends)
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Arrests Made in Massive Maple Syrup Theft
"Authorities never disclosed the exact amount of maple syrup stolen in August. But the warehouse contained Quebec's maple syrup reserves, which were supposed to hold 10 million pounds (4.54 million kilograms) valued at $30 million."
Read it here.
Friday, August 31, 2012
Sunday, March 20, 2011
The New York Times does Maple Syrup

The New York Times
Living With the Sweet Smell of Sap
By CAITLIN KELLY
HARPERSFIELD, N.Y.
WHEN most people think of maple syrup, they think of Vermont or Canada. Yet New York State has plenty of sugarbushes and producers, and they are eager to introduce their crop to those who think that all brown syrup in a plastic jug is the real thing.
“Most people have never experienced pure maple,” said Dennis Hill, who has been tapping trees since he was a boy to capture the sap that becomes maple syrup.
Maple is one of the most natural and unadulterated liquids, even after processing, that you can buy. The clear, light-green sap is piped directly from the tree into a huge steel vat, then boiled down for long hours. This classic production process may conjure up rustic visions of burly guys in plaid shirts hauling metal buckets through the woods, pouring hot syrup into battered metal pans laid atop the snow, steaming sweetly in the winter air.
Hardly. While some makers still use buckets and do much of their work by hand, serious maple syrup producers long ago switched to a system of blue and black plastic tubing that makes their woods — known as sugarbushes — look more like outdoor laboratories.
Visitors interested in how maple products are made — and how they taste — are in luck. This Saturday and Sunday and March 26 to 27, more than 100 producers in upstate New York — a few in Putnam and Dutchess counties, most in Delaware County — are opening their doors for the annual celebration known as Maple Weekend. The festivities will include demonstrations, tours and even pancake breakfasts. Mr. Hill’s Catskills farm here, Shaver-Hill Farm — which he runs with his two sons — expects to serve 700 to 1,000 hungry guests each weekend.
“We encourage people to try visiting different makers,” said Dwayne Hill, 48, one of Dennis’s sons. “Everyone does it differently, and there are all sorts of ways to make it. There’s no right way or wrong way.”
At Shaver-Hill Farm the process begins with 6,000 feet of line stretched at chest height, transporting sap to the high-technology machines that will transform it into sugar, maple cream and syrup. Every year the Hills tap their trees once daily temperature shifts produce the necessary combination of freezing cold nights and warmer days that make the sap flow freely. Using a peg called a spile, they pierce the bark, attach the tubing, and a central vacuum pump ensures a smooth, steady flow of sap.
The journey from tree trunk to bottle? About 12 hours.
A mini-waterfall produced by the combined flow of 800 trees starts the process. Once the sap is collected, it’s run through an evaporator, which can process 750 gallons of sap per hour, removing almost all the water, which boosts sugar content from 2.6 percent to about 68 percent. A reverse osmosis machine speeds the process.
The Hills work with the sap only three months of the year. They spend the other nine months on what they say is a more difficult task — marketing their wares to Americans who have never even tasted maple syrup. Many consumers buy syrup that doesn’t contain maple, and have no idea that they’re missing maple’s distinctive and subtle flavor. It works well in a variety of foods, Dwayne said, adding, “It’s very good on vanilla ice cream, baked beans, sweet potatoes, for glazing ham.”
The men of Shaver-Hill Farm weren’t always so focused on maple, but seven years ago they began specializing, selling off their herd of Holstein dairy cows and selling syrup, sugar and other wares directly to consumers.
“This job is definitely sweeter smelling,” said Dwayne’s brother, David, 47.
Though the 99-year-old property is a family business, the definition of family can be expansive. Paul Murphy has long considered the farm his second home. He was a 7-year-old from Manhattan when, with the help of the Fresh Air Fund, he began spending summers with the Hill family.
“It was like paradise,” Mr. Murphy, now 47 and a graphic designer for New York City Transit, recalls. He returned for 11 summers. “I always cried when I left.” In his teens Mr. Murphy went up to the farm in winter to help with sapping and fondly remembers the old days when a huge cast-iron stove could be found in the former sap house and he fed the red-hot maw with logs to keep the liquid boiling.
This year’s tough winter will probably boost sap production, a happy change from 2010, which the Hills said was the worst season they had experienced, producing only 700 gallons instead of the usual 2,500. With a cordless drill they started tapping this year on Feb. 23. Each sugarbush has 100 trees and 1,500 taps; Shaver-Hill has three sugarbushes. (The largest producers, in Quebec and Vermont, have 30,000 to 80,000 taps.)
Forest creatures like deer, squirrels and coyotes love to gnaw on the tubes and suck out the sap, making daily checks of the lines a necessity.
Those interested in making their own syrup can buy the necessary equipment at the farm. However artisanally tempting, you shouldn’t try this on your kitchen stove, the Hills warn. It takes 35 gallons of sap to produce one gallon of syrup, the rest evaporating into huge clouds of wall-ruining condensation.
Once acquired, the taste for maple runs deep. The Hill family ships products all over the world, from Iran and Qatar to Sweden, Turkey and Australia. A scientist working in Antarctica even received a maple sugar care package — air-dropped onto the ice — sent by his mom.
Mr. Murphy, who’ll be up at Shaver-Hill to celebrate the Maple Weekends with his rural brothers, now adds maple syrup to everything from his morning coffee to his Thanksgiving cranberry sauce.
At roughly $10 a pint “it is very expensive,” he conceded. “But it’s worth it.”
SOURCE: http://travel.nytimes.com/2011/03/18/travel/18maple.html
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Wakarusa Maple Syrup Festival

The Elkhart County Community Foundation has awarded the Wakarusa Historical Society in conjunction with the Wakarusa Maple Syrup Festival Sugar Camp and Wakarusa Chamber of Commerce grant monies to purchase "Boiling Pans" and "Evaporator"
For over 40 years area school children grades 2 – 4 are formally invited and everyone is welcome to take the educational tour of a working Maple Sugar Camp!
Existing pans and evaporator are privately owned by the Amish men who have run the camp for 10 years; Eli Kuhns and Wilbur Miller, both syrup manufacturers by trade. Previously Wilbur would bring his own pans to town to be used during Education Days (the third week in March) and during the Maple Syrup Festival (third weekend in April) to provide the FREE working Sugar Camp Tours. With March, being prime tapping time, Wilbur would have to take the sap he gathered at his home to Eli’s house to boil, as his pans were being used for Education Days.
The Wakarusa Historical Society and Maple Syrup Festival Committee and the Wakarusa Chamber of Commerce are indebted with gratitude to these two men for all they have done to keep this important tradition alive but would like to properly own the pans and the evaporator. This would free these men from sacrificing their own equipment as well as provide the added security that the camp can exist when and if these men decide to retire and another take their place.
There are all sorts of maple-themed events (go online to see them all), including lots of chances to taste all things maple.
The annual event is sponsored by the Wakarusa Chamber of Commerce.
Saturday, January 8, 2011
Maple Syrup Festival

Tours will start every hour from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., but you can take a self-guided tour of the sugarhouse with an operating evaporator. Syrup-making demonstrations showing Native American (as pictured) and pioneer methods will be held from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day.
There'll be maple syrup, maple candy, maple cream and maple cotton candy for sale, along with home-baked maple goods. If you want something more to eat, there'll be pancakes and waffles plus chicken, pork chop or pulled pork dinners (and, yes, there's carry-out available).
Sugarbush is located at 321 North Garrison Hollow Road, Salem, Indiana (that's north of SR160, 7.6 miles west of I-65 at Henryville, and 10.5 miles east of Salem). For more information, call 812:967-4491 or 877:841-8851.
For more tourist information about the area, go online.
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