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Maple Syrup Winter 2012: Producers Say Mild Weather Could Hurt Output

AP    
First Posted: 02/21/2012 9:42 am Updated: 02/21/2012 11:14 am

TEMPLE, N.H. (AP) — A mild winter across the Northeast is injecting extra uncertainty into maple syrup season, but many producers say they'll just go with the flow, whenever it starts.

Temperatures have been up and snowfall totals have been down throughout the region this winter, raising some concern for the maple syrup crop. But syrup producers say the weather during the six-week season when sap flows matters more than the weather leading up to it.

"The mild winter, I'm sure has some effect on the trees and the soil and the microorganisms and so forth, but as long as you get those freezes and thaws during the actual sap flow season, those are what control how much sap you get," said Brian Stowe, sugaring operations manager at the University of Vermont's Proctor Maple Research Center.

Below-freezing nights followed by warm days are necessary to start the sap flowing from maple trees, a period that usually begins in late February or early March. But those conditions arrived early in some areas, prompting producers like Ben Fisk, of Temple, to start collecting and boiling sap Feb. 2, more than a month earlier than he did last year.

"We made syrup the earliest we've ever made syrup this year," said Fisk, 23, a fifth generation producer who has been making maple syrup since he was 5. "This time of year, there should be three or four feet of snow, and it should be cold out and we shouldn't even be thinking about making syrup for another couple weeks."

Though Fisk was happy to get a jump start on the season, it could end early, too, if prolonged stretches of warm weather result in budding trees. That's the main concern in New York state, where the director of the New York Maple Producers Association has been hearing from plenty of worried members.

"I've had more phone calls this year than I've ever gotten before. Everyone wants to know what everyone else is doing. 'Is it time?' 'Should we tap?'" said Helen Thomas, who set the 1,700 taps on her family's farm about a week earlier than usual.

With so little snow, she worries that all it will take is one warm day in March to trick the trees into thinking spring has arrived. Once trees start to bud, the sap develops an "off" flavor, effectively ending the season.

"The snow moderates any warm-up. You can have a 60-degree day in March, but if there's two feet of snow on the ground, that tends to keep the woods cool, so you can get past that warm day or two," she said.

In North Andover, Mass., Paul Boulanger of Turtle Lane Maple Farm, has decided not to tap his trees at all this year because he's already seeing signs of leaf buds on the trees.

"Even if we started tapping right now, we'd only get a couple of weeks of very watered down sap, and it's just not worth it ... We just didn't have winter, and without winter, there's no spring, and without spring, there's no maple syrup," said Boulanger, who still plans to give educational tours of his sugar house by watering down syrup he made last year and turning it back into sap.

But in northern Vermont, Jacques Couture is optimistic. Couture, 61, has been sugaring since he was a toddler and has run his own operation for 40 years. Some of his best crops have been after winters just like this one, he said.

"Some people say, 'Is it worth tapping this year, you don't even have any snow. It's going to be spring before you know it,'" he said. "But the caution I would say is, 'Don't transplant your tomatoes outdoors just yet, because it ain't over.'"

Unlike points further south, there has been some snow in Westfield, Vt., where Couture lives. But it's closer to knee-deep than the chest-deep drifts he faced last year when it was time to tap his trees.

"We've had a lot of thaws this winter," he said. "But the old timers say, every thaw in the winter is a run of sap in the spring," he said. "This is agriculture, and you never what kind of crop you're going to get, but you've still got to try to do the best you can. ... So I'm not the least bit discouraged about it at this point."

It takes about 40 gallons of sap to make one gallon of syrup. Last year, U.S. maple production hit an all-time high of 2.79 million gallons, led by Vermont with 1.14 million gallons. Beyond good weather, technology has played a role in the industry's growth, with vacuum tube systems that pull he sap from trees and new taps with valves designed to prevent sap flowing back into the trees.

Small amounts of syrup already have been produced in southern and central Maine, the No. 3 syrup-producing state behind Vermont and New York. Eric Ellis, a manager at Maine Maple Products in Madison and vice president of the Maine Maple Producers Association, said producers statewide are tapping their trees.

"There certainly is concern, but going into any season there's always a little bit of doubt," Ellis said. "We don't really know until it's over what the crop's going to be."

Bodan Peters, president of the New Hampshire Maple Producers Association, said he probably will wait until early March to set up his 800 taps in Sugar Hill. The mild winter doesn't have him too concerned.

"Everything leading up to this point is just what gets thrown at us," said Peters, who grew up on a farm and has been tapping his own trees for 12 years.

"If you're going to get into maple sugaring, you've got to love it, the good and the bad about it," he said. "If you can actually pay for your equipment, that's a plus."

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TEMPLE, N.H. (AP) — A mild winter across the Northeast is injecting extra uncertainty into maple syrup season, but many producers say they'll just go with the flow, whenever it starts. ...
TEMPLE, N.H. (AP) — A mild winter across the Northeast is injecting extra uncertainty into maple syrup season, but many producers say they'll just go with the flow, whenever it starts. ...
TEMPLE, N.H. (AP) — A mild winter across the Northeast is injecting extra uncertainty into maple syrup season, but many producers say they'll just go with the flow, whenever it starts. ...
TEMPLE, N.H. (AP) — A mild winter across the Northeast is injecting extra uncertainty into maple syrup season, but many producers say they'll just go with the flow, whenever it starts. ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
landslowrance
Been There, Done That!
10:57 PM on 02/22/2012
interesting article.
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AngryMonkey
Stop believing in fairy tales
07:39 PM on 02/22/2012
We in NW Indiana have a local source at a county park. Wonderful stuff will have to ask them about it when we go next month. It has been very mild here this year so we shall see.
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4everright
My heart went boom
04:02 PM on 02/22/2012
It's obvious these guys have no idea what they are doing...Take it over, Obama.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nomadrdw
Zen Druid
04:39 PM on 02/22/2012
just can't help yourself can you? pathetic and sad that you can't seem to find anything better to do with your spare time than blame every problem on this planet on President Obama
11:34 AM on 02/26/2012
did u read that GM is putting on 3rd shifts across the country recently?
u know the same GM that obama bailed out saving tens of thousands of jobs?
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ecoalex
Ecofarmer
01:20 PM on 02/22/2012
Organic Maple Syrup doesn't use paraformaldehyde tablets in the tap holes in the trees.Conventional maple syrup usually does use paraformaldehyde tablets in the tap holes in the trees so the tap holes don't close up,making for more sap flow.paraformaldehyde is in the syrup.

Most syrup producers now use pipelines of vary sizes also vacuum on the lines to suck more syrup from the trees.Maple syrup production as most of agriculture has become maximised with dubious methods to produce more.
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ecoalex
Ecofarmer
12:25 PM on 02/22/2012
I used to love maple syrup.After sugaring in Burke Vt ,and testing the syrup out of the pan at the take off station for 2 seasons,I got sugared out.I lost my desire to eat the stuff.I use honey now.
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PlutocratsSuck
Godless heathen liberal...and loving it.
09:38 AM on 02/22/2012
Rick Perry isn't gonna like this.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:38 AM on 02/22/2012
Maple syrup is one of my little, guilty pleasures. Way more expensive than the fake syrups, but hauntingly delicious.

I hope the price doesn't go up too much higher.
02:32 AM on 02/22/2012
what a bunch of BS, the industry will survive no matter what, this is just another attempt by the tree huggers to make us think that they need more money for research
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wanderland
Generic white guy
09:42 AM on 02/22/2012
You must have been reading a different article.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alteredstory
Hold on to the center
11:14 AM on 02/22/2012
You don't know how maple sugaring works, do you?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Still kickin
life should be Little House meets the Jetsons :)
01:11 AM on 02/22/2012
I wonder how the Birch syrup is fairing. That stuff is pretty tasty....not the same of course, but at least it's not corn syrup :)
01:56 AM on 02/22/2012
What? Where might I be able to find that?
When I was growing up, my relatives would tap birch trees, but we'd just ferment it. It came out like a kind of sour fizzy drink.. I'd love to try it in syrup form too!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Still kickin
life should be Little House meets the Jetsons :)
09:28 AM on 02/22/2012
LOL fermented sounds good! It's been a couple of years, but I ordered it from a place on the west coast. you'll have to google it, cuase this old brain can't remember the name of the place. It was good though....probably still on my hips :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nomadrdw
Zen Druid
04:45 PM on 02/22/2012
you can find it at a lot of farmers markets, the one in Indy has someone that has been selling it here for years, it took me a couple of times to adjust to it, as you expect that maple flavor,but it is very good.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dekendall
01:09 AM on 02/22/2012
Years ago while in NYC I saw an add that told that a person could adopt a tree and all the maple sugar tapped from that tree would be sent to you. This year doesn't sound like a good year but, maybe next year would be OK. Does anyone out there know where I could connect up with such a service?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alteredstory
Hold on to the center
11:15 AM on 02/22/2012
If you do, aim for Quebec. You're not going to get your money's worth from America these days - the conditions just aren't there anymore.
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yeti7
don't need no stink'n badges
06:11 AM on 02/23/2012
It takes a lot of sap to end up with a pint of good syrup.
How many trees would that take?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
seehowtheyrun
Without music, life would be a mistake
11:32 PM on 02/21/2012
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ! I've been waiting for the price of Maple Sugar to drop !
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11:22 PM on 02/21/2012
NOOOOOOOOOOO! WHY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jvinylman502
My dogs eat out of their own bowls,why don't you ?
10:50 PM on 02/21/2012
there is a ( chance ) that ( maybe ) there ( could be ) a (possible ) but ( not sure ) a shortage. So...lets all freak out ! lol
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wme98
Send in the clowns...Don't bother they're here!!!!
10:34 PM on 02/21/2012
OMG someone tell Rush. He will want to stock up now. From physique it looks like he eats a lot of pancakes.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kevmi16
SEENITBEFORE
09:49 PM on 02/21/2012
You can tell the people who have never had real Maple syrup they eat that awful cornsyrup fake stuff, nasty.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jvinylman502
My dogs eat out of their own bowls,why don't you ?
10:52 PM on 02/21/2012
Right....store purchesed value brand and higher brands just don't cut it.
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yeti7
don't need no stink'n badges
06:29 AM on 02/23/2012
When we were kids (in west Texas) our Grandmother would boil a pot of sugar water down a bit and then add maple syrup extract to the hot sugar/water mix and some real butter then pour that over our french fried french toast! God what a little slice of heaven that was. Anyway for years that was our maple syrup.
I now buy the real stuff but in some ways it doesn't compare to all the love that went into our Granny's home made maple syrup.