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With the coming of spring, with freezing nights and warming days, the sap in the old sturdy maple trees starts its journey up the trees. For generations Diane's family has harvested the sweetness of the maple tree. When she was a little girl Diane remembers peeking into her grandfather's sugar house at night to see her grandfather and uncles tending the fires and skimming the foam from boiling sap pans. Maple sugaring is a tradition in Diane's family.
Diane and her father continued the tradition by making maple syrup. They constructed a small sugaring hut, a simple shelter from the elements. Many days and nights of dedicated work brought forth delicious gold from the maple trees. Once you have partaken in the old fashioned task of maple sugaring you can sense in the warming of the weather that the sap is running and the urge to commence sugaring is irresistible!
The tradition has been carried down further as Diane has done maple sugaring with her own family. One year when Diane and her family were making maple syrup Diane drew and painted the pussy willows around the photograph of Sarah collecting sap with Tasha Corgi and used it as an early springtime card.
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In 1865, in Diane's direct family line, George Deuel harvested 200 pounds of maple sugar, James Standish harvested 175 pounds of maple sugar, and Lynus Shepard harvested 100 pounds of maple sugar.
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It is so nice to be out in the coming of spring collecting sap, tending fires, and seeing and hearing the birds! When Sarah was little, her friends came over to help and experience the art of maple sugaring as they helped bore holes for spiles. With spoons the girls tasted the sap as it came out of the tree. Diane explained to Sarah's friends though the sap was clear and tasteless now, when boiled and evaporated down it would become a thickened maple syrup.
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In "A Time to Keep" Tasha Tudor illustrates a sap house and sugar bush with a family partaking in the annual tradition of gathering sap. Pussy willows and red-winged blackbirds surround the drawings. Diane loves to hear the red-winged blackbird, it reminds her that spring is coming. As of yet, the red-wing has not returned. "Around the Year" is another of Diane's favorite Tasha Tudor books that illustrates the tasks and celebrations around the year. There is also maple sugaring in "Around the Year" by Tasha Tudor.
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