Maple syrup weather

Tapped tress mark maple sap time near the Huttner Weather Lab in Deephaven.(Photos by Paul Huttner)

Howie Bennis is a busy guy this time of year. My neighbor, driveway snowplow guy extraordinaire, former mayor and lifelong Deephaven resident comes from a family that used to tend a local veggie farm back in the day. The Huttner boys used to get some work picking veggies when we were kids. These days Howie farms maple trees to produce the sweet nectar that is Minnesota maple syrup.

Today is the kind of weather maple sappers love. Sunny skies, below freezing in the morning, above freezing in the afternoon. That usually gets the trees running pretty good.

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Tap & tube feeds the maple sap into the bucket below.

I remeber field trips to the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum when we were kids. We'd tour the woods and taste the ever so slightly sweet sap running from the sugar maples. Then we'd head into the cooking house to see the big steel vats of sap boiling down all day to produce maple syrup. If I remember my math right, it takes about 40 gallons of maple sap to get one gallon of maple syrup.

Multiple buckets gather sap, which is collected and brought back to the "cooking house" for processing.

I think I'll stop by Howie's place this weekend. Writing this blog is making me hungry to eat a stack of pancakes drenched in the delicious mapley goodness that's running out of the trees near the Weather Lab.

PH