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How to Make Maple Syrup I: Choosing Trees and Getting Sap — 25 Comments

  1. Thank you for such an informative post. I have never made my own maple syrup, but want to. I hope to walk through our woods this summer and mark the maple trees to tap.

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  3. Very informative article…..we love maple syrup – the real stuff. Not enough of such trees here though. Thank you for sharing this. Gentle Joy

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  9. This is so much fun! We tried sugarin’ for the first time this spring with our kids, and they loved every minute of it! The plastic spouts are less damaging to the trees than the old school metal spouts, so we went with those.

  10. Hi Janet, I was absolutely thrilled once I found your article and blog. Thank you for sharing your knowledge, appreciate. However, I have just noticed the trees outside in Riverhead Long Island. It is now almost May, but still cool. Is it possible to still tap now?
    Charmaine

    • Hi Charmaine, no, it is much to late to tap this year. the time to tap is when night time temperatures are still below freezing, but day time temps are rising above freezing. In your area, that is probably somewhere around mid-Feb through early March. If you tap now, the liquid you’d get would be yellowish. The syrup from late sap tastes bad.

  11. We make our taps from bamboo stalks we grow . They are plenty sturdy and easy to clean and just tossed n the fire at end of season. They make handy garden stakes in the summer and kids love picking out thier own pole for fishing.we have 3sugar maples we tap and box elder I didn’t know was usable……Would I mix the sap?

  12. Closed spiles seem to work better in terms of intermittent flow days. Open spiles as shown tend to need reboring if flow ceases for a few days. Out here near Seattle I’ve gotten good flows in December and it’s all over by February. Next year I will try even earlier, perhaps in early November and see what happens. We use big leaf maple because that’s all there is and it’s a 60:1 reduction to syrup.

  13. When using milk or cider jugs to collect sap, tie some twine all the way around the tree and through the jug handle to keep the jug from blowing off the spile. Keep the twine just tight enough to keep the jug on the smile, but loose enough to allow you to slide the jug off and pour it out. Alternatively, cut the square hole just 7/16″ or a little less to keep the jug on the spile with friction.
    “Got Maples? Make Syrup!”™
    Sleepy Hollow, NY

  14. Thanks for sharing these great and informative articles. Just made our first pint of syrup with your help. Rigged up two big baking pans over a fire in our portable fire pit. Very temporary and experimental just to see how it went. 6 gallons of sap collected in two days mainly from one big tree in our lakeside yard. We plan on collecting all next week and boil up again on Saturday. Big plans for next year as we have access to probably 20+ more trees. Twin Lake, Mich. Feb 25 2018. THANKS AGAIN.

  15. The milk jugs that you advocate using for gathering containers are made of High Density Polyethylene (HDPE Plastic container recycling number 2). This has a tendency to pick up flavors and odors from anything with which it comes comes into contact then release it slowly into subsequent contacts. It can give an off flavor that you might not notice in the sap but will be more pronounced in the syrup or sugar. I advise that you limit the source of these container to those that held water.

  16. It surprises me that we can make our maple syrup through trees that leaf our well in the summer season. My mom and I love making pancakes, therefore, we would like to know more about the infamous maple syrup. We’ll try our best to come up with our own using these tips that you’ve provided; in the meantime, we’d continue looking for the best maple syrup around Vermont.

  17. The bud you labeled as Red Maple looks to me more like Silver Maple – aren’t Red Maple buds more bulbous and clustered at the tip? Either way, awesome article!

    • No, I think red and silver maple buds are almost indistinguishable, except by odor (silver maple has unpleasant odor when you scratch into the twig). Both tend to cluster at the tip but not on every twig. I know mine was a red maple because it was from a tree in my yard, which I see leaf out every year, and the leaves are easy to distinguish from those of silver maple.