Showing posts with label maple sugaring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label maple sugaring. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

This year's maple-themed decor

 

 I really should share this year's maple-themed decorating with you all.   I posted a few photos on Instagram but nothing here on the blog.  So here are just a few photos and I'll add a little explanatory text with each one.

It's important to me to celebrate maple season each spring.  It was such a wonderful part of my life growing up, and still is.  Early spring could be a very discouraging season here in New Hampshire -- usually there's still a good bit of snow in addition to a lot of mud.  It's exceedingly rare that any spring flower, no matter how hardy, dares to show its head.  Sugaring time adds a spark of fun to the season as well as a wonderful purpose -- producing maple syrup to enjoy throughout the coming year.

Above are the basic maple themed shelves on my hutch.  Old maple syrup tins, a couple of "sugar cake" molds, and some vintage sugaring photos on the top shelf.

Below it, old and new jadeite, a maple syrup pitcher, and a couple of tiny brown birds.  I added the "blessed" sign just because I am blessed!

The above photo shows the entire hutch.  A bit blurry.  All of these photos were taken with the Kindle.

I added maple decor to the living room this year as well, atop a bookcase in a corner of the room.

 

Just a favorite lantern, a sap spile, some maple sugaring art, a syrup tin shaped like a cabin, and maple syrup labels from back in the day when Mr. T's grandfather and mine both made maple syrup to sell.

A closer look.


Above is the dining table with a maple-themed centerpiece.  A small cake dome contains a cabin-shaped maple syrup tin and a small wooden tree.
The cake dome is centered on a sugaring-themed linen towel.
From this end of the cake dome you can just see the wooden tree behind the cabin.

 Above is a closer look at that fascinating linen towel.  If you can't read it, it says "With warm days and freezing nights,  sweet impulsive life stirs in the woods.  Sap's A-Runnin'".  That is a wooden sap bucket at lower left. The red item is a wooden neck yoke which enabled the wearer to carry two gathering buckets at once.  A chickadee is perched on the yoke.

And there is just a little peek at this year's maple decor.  Hope it gives you just a tiny taste of New Hampshire maple sugaring season.

Friday, February 28, 2020

Friday five ~ February 28


Can't believe the week has flown by already and I haven't posted!  It's not for lack of wanting to or even a lack of subject matter.  Just. too. busy.   But not too busy to count a few blessings today.

1. A fun time with friends at Cracker Barrel on Saturday.  We love to get together with our friends Dave and Gina for breakfast occasionally, and at least once a year we try to make it a Cracker Barrel breakfast with some of our family members joining us.  This year it was two of their daughters, along with our local daughter and her hubby and kids.

Nothing better than the Sunrise Sampler!

2.  Several lovely days to get out and walk this week.  Sunny, with warm temps.  The sap has been running and it's been so nice to see trees being tapped and know that sugaring season is coming.  So spring will be coming too ...

3.  The fun of making some simple Scripture graphics using Canva.  I'm finding this such an enjoyable and creative way to reinforce what I'm learning as I continue on the 40-day sugar fast.  I'm using these for Instagram posts during the fast.

4.  Mr. T getting to enjoy an adventure with two of the grandkids on Tuesday afternoon after school.  He took Sam and Josiah on a snowshoe hike through the woods to the old sugar house.  It's so much fun to see him having the time to have special times with the grandchildren.  They even spotted an ancient truck, as seen below.


5.  A pretty sky at sunset one night this week.  Not glorious, but just pretty and somehow reassuring.  Like a quiet benediction to the day.  The sun was setting as Mr. T and the boys finished their hike, and he got some pictures.  The one below was the nicest.

Have a wonderful weekend, everyone!  And, as my friend Denise often reminds people, don't forget to make some time to worship at your local church on Sunday.  It truly is important and will be a blessing to you.

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Simple Spring decor


I'll be changing out the middle shelf on the hutch tomorrow so I decided to get some photos today.  I need to take down the maple sugaring items which I had left in place for our Nevada daughter's visit.  I'll just share photos and some very simple commentary.
 Jadeite, green and white, the family heirloom ironstone, Johnson Bros. plate and a felt "chocolate" bunny on wheels.
 Maple syrup tins and labels, a sap spile, molds for maple sugar candy, and a tiny jug of maple syrup.
A bunny on colorful vintage books, Fiesta ware cup and saucer, pretty pitcher and blue bird ...

 A closer look at the pretty teapot, a gift from my friend Terry


 
Faux daffodils on my tea-themed table runner
Here's a partial look at another runner I made as a gift.
 These spring-themed book page banners are at the windows.
Closer look at one of the flowers
I know the pictures are small; double click on them for a closer look.  Hope you've enjoyed this peek at our simple spring dining area!

Monday, April 15, 2019

Early spring decorating


Yep, early spring.  And actually it doesn't even look like early spring up here.  It still looks like winter.  Saturday was beautiful but we were out and about doing errands south of here all day.

Today is in the high 40s but very cloudy and rainy.  It feels cold and raw.  We're still surrounded by snow and the woods are full of it.  I was reading this morning about some folks from southern NH who thought the past weekend would be a fine time for a simple hike in the White Mountains and ended up having to be rescued.  Here's a quote from the article:

"The hikers were not prepared for the winter conditions that are still present in the White Mountains, and did not have adequate cold weather gear, lights or navigation equipment such as a dedicated GPS or map and compass.

"Conservation officers remind people planning to hike the White Mountains that trails there remain packed with feet of snow and ice.  Weather may appear warm and comfortable at lower elevations during daytime, but temperatures quickly turn colder at higher elevations or when the sun sets."

There you have it on the very best authority: hiking trails in the White Mountains remain packed with FEET of snow and ice.   It doesn't appear to be too much different in our own woods out back.

So with all of that, it's easy to see why I have not been in any hurry to take down my lighted winter houses or to remove the maple-sugaring decor I bring out in early spring.  Sugaring is actually still going on.

Still, with Easter coming this weekend, I feel as if I need to change to something that looks more springlike, so I'm posting about my early spring decor while it's still in place.  I'll just post pics and say a word or two about each one.
 I love this sugaring themed linen towel that I found in a dresser drawer at my parents' home.  Beautiful!
 This is the centerpiece on our dining room table.  Little cake dome on a doily, centered on the sugaring themed towel.
 Inside the cake dome, a little maple syrup tin in the shape of a sugar house, and a little wooden pine tree, barely visible.
 Here are the maple sugaring shelves on the hutch.  Syrup tins, labels and spiles, maple candy molds that were my grandmother's, even a little bottle of maple syrup.
The bottom shelf I did in green and white as a nod to St. Patrick's Day and the eventual coming of spring leaves and grass.  The jadeite came from my childhood vacation cottage.  The Colonial Homestead sugar and creamer are from my collection, and match the set that is in my grandmother's pondside cottage.  The little "Love is Kind" cross stitch (to the right of the ironstone soup tureen) was done by one of my daughters as a teenager as a gift for grandparents.

I recently came upon it in my sorting, and was struck by how nice the frame looked with the jadeite and other greens on the hutch. 
Here's a somewhat blurry photo of the hutch in its entirety.  Love the jadeite teacups on the top shelf!

Hope you've enjoyed this peek at our early spring decorating.  I'm still liking how it looks.

Friday, March 23, 2018

Maple memories


I’ve been wanting for years to write a post about my memories of maple sugaring, but just hadn’t found the time.  I finally accomplished this in 2018, but I have added in a few more recent photos now, in 2022. I want this to serve the dual purpose of recording memories for my grandkids as well as making an interesting early-spring blog post.

That picture at the top is a scan of a greeting card.  It looks, really, amazingly like my grandfather's sugarhouse and sugar orchard.   There was the same woods road bordered by old stone walls and mounds of rocks, the same hillside sloping up behind in one area, the same maples lining the road, and even the same mountain in the distance!  I have to wonder, I really do, if the artist had visited my grandparents' sugar orchard.  Or maybe, probably, many New England sugar orchards looked a lot alike.
A vintage sugaring postcard that I recently found
I guess I’ll start with the earliest  memories.  I literally grew up with sugaring, so that as a child there was never a time it wasn’t part of my life.  As mentioned above, my grandfather had a good-sized sugar orchard and maple syrup operation.   He had a sugarhouse way up in the sugar orchard, and how I wish I knew more about it.  Was the sugarhouse already there when he bought the land?  I’m guessing maybe it was, for it was weathered and dilapidated even in my childhood.

The picture below with horses is one that I recently found.  I think that my grandfather is the man standing in the center of the photo behind the gathering tank.  I believe that the middle child sitting to his right, the smiling little girl, is my mother.  To the far left, the oldest sister looks exceedingly proud to be holding the reins.  It seems to me that this is probably a posed picture, most likely taken at the end of the sugaring season, since there is no snow.


🍁   🍁   🍁   🍁   🍁    🍁   🍁   🍁   🍁

My grandparents sold maple syrup as well as what we simply called “sugar cakes” — which is what you get when you boil maple syrup beyond the syrup stage until it crystallizes.    My grandmother made these, not in the sugarhouse, but in the farmhouse, and she poured the maple sugar into beautiful tin molds shaped like stars.

Nowadays if you visit gift shops in New England, you'll often see maple candies in the form of maple leaves and other shapes.  It's basically the same thing, but the sugar cakes were larger. This maple candy is very sweet and also very delicious.  My daughter made some maple candy this year, and below you see two grandchildren about to partake!


The photo below is one of several I have that was taken in my grandparents' sugar orchard.  I'm sorry to say that I don't know who the boy with the oxen is, and I don't recognize the dog in front of him.  The other dog, over at the far left, looks like my grandparent's farm dog Tippy.  She was famous for being able to open latched doors (the type where one just lifts the latch) with her nose.
Sugaring with oxen in my grandparents' sugar orchard

  Probably my own earliest memories of this sugarhouse start when I was in first grade.  You can just see the corner of the sugarhouse at the far left in the photo which includes the oxen.  Below, you can see part of the outside of the sugarhouse behind these children -- I'm on the right, with my cousin at left and my brother in the middle.  You'll note (from both the illustration at top, and the photographs) that sugarhouses were often not constructed very tightly or out of top-grade materials.

The local schools used to bring kids there on field trips during sugaring time.  I think about this now and am amazed.  Taking a school bus full of kids onto a dirt road in sugaring time, then letting said children loose to swarm up a muddy hillside amid soft, wet snowbanks -- I'm quite sure that just wouldn't be the thing today.  But I'm glad it was okay back then, for I have memories of myself sitting in the back room of the sugarhouse on an unstable old wooden bench with a bunch of my classmates, sipping warm, freshly made maple syrup from a Dixie cup and dipping a plain raised doughnut into the syrup from time to time.  I didn't enjoy school.  It was terrifying for me.  But here, I belonged.  I had sat on this bench dozens of times eating syrup with doughnuts fried by my grandmother.  These other kids didn't belong here; they were out of their element.  But I think the sugarhouse field trips were a favorite of all the kids who were able to go on them.
From our daily newspaper, some years ago
My memories of sugaring are also interwoven with my memories of my Aunt Joanne, my mother's youngest sister.  (In the very old photo above, the one with the horses hitched to the sled, Joanne would be the little girl at the far right.)  In my growing up years, Joanne was married and raising a family of her own.  They lived quite a distance away, especially back then when there were no interstate highways and the speed limit was 50 mph at best.  Travel could be iffy during sugaring season, with snowstorms or freezing rain a possibility at any time.  Yet every year during this special season that she loved so much, my Aunt Joanne made the effort to bring her kids up here for sugaring.  In the photo below, her two oldest daughters are the girls at the left.  We loved it when they visited and could hike up with us to the sugarhouse in the woods.

 
Nearly every day after school in sugaring season, my brother and I would put on our wool snow pants and our jackets and head for the sugarhouse.  Can you imagine our mother let us do this?  It involved walking up a dirt road and then scrambling up the aforementioned snowy/muddy hillside until we disappeared from view among the trees.   The tree above, where we might stop to rest, would have been still in sight if my mother looked out the back door.  But the sugarhouse was much deeper into the woods than this, past a long stone wall and down a lane.  Below you can see the sugarhouse with steam pouring out.  Maple-scented steam is simply amazing!

Of course we would stay up there as late as we dared.  Oftentimes it would be nearly dark by the time we made it back down the hill and trudged up the road to our home.  I had heard many stories of bobcats in those woods, so often we ran down the hill rather than trudged!

It was so good to see lights shining from the windows of our house, and to come in and smell a delicious supper all ready for us.  Often on winter nights my mother would make something like baked potatoes with creamed chipped beef.  Oh, so good!  When we had baked potatoes, we would cut them in half, then scoop out the innards onto our plate ready to add butter, salt and pepper.  But we would drop a pat of butter into each potato skin and wait for it to melt before eating it, holding it sort of folded so the butter wouldn't drip out.  Simply delicious.
A vintage syrup ad that I love!
As time went on, this large sugaring operation was discontinued.  A neighbor had built a little backyard sugarhouse, and he was allowed to tap the roadside trees in the family sugar orchard.  It was probably around this time that my parents decided to try a little bit of backyard maple sugaring, boiling down the sap on their outdoor stone fireplace (previously used for cooking hot dogs and marshmallows, and the occasional hamburger).

I don't have photos of this endeavor.  However, I do have one photo that I found of the fireplace in earlier years.  My brother and I are playing near it.  I may have been pretending it was the fireplace in a cabin ... who knows?  It looks as if I may be trying to sweep the "floor".  What I can say for sure is that boiling sap on this outdoor fireplace was asking quite a bit of it, and it fell into disrepair soon after that experiment.

Our neighbor eventually gave all of his small-scale sugaring equipment to my brother, and my dad built a nice little sugarhouse next to the garage.  The evaporator, of course, was inside, and a little woodshed on the back contained the wood needed to keep a good fire going under the evaporator.

Our method of collecting sap at that time was to load up the back of the family Jeep with a metal gathering tank, a stack of gathering buckets, and kids -- siblings, cousins, neighbors, friends.  We would park the Jeep in a central location and then we kids would scatter, gathering buckets in hand, to the various maples -- some along the roadside and some up in the woods -- that my dad had previously helped us to tap.  We went from tree to tree, emptying the sap buckets into our gathering buckets.

 (The photos below are of my grandchildren in 2018 and 2022-- but they depict the process well.)

 


Most of the trees had several taps, and some had as many as five.  The photo below is timeless; it could be from any decade since the advent of color film.   But it was from 2018, taken by my daughter.

 

Josiah is giving his mom and her phone quite the look!  But I wanted to include this photo because the gathering bucket he's carrying is very similar to the ones we used as teens in the 1960s.  And of course, they were old even then.

It wasn't long before our gathering buckets were as full as we dared carry.  If they were too full, cold wet sap would invariably slosh out and onto our pant legs.  As you view Josiah above, you can easily see see the potential for sloshing sap! 

The illustration below is by local artist Cheryl Johnson and graced the front of a brochure some years ago.  I've always liked this since it looks a lot like my own two girls working together to carry a heavy gathering bucket back in the day. 

Arriving back at the Jeep, we would either clamber up and carefully pour our buckets of sap into the large gathering tank, or -- if we were fortunate enough to have plenty of helpers, one person would remain stationed in the back of the Jeep and do all the pouring, as Julia is doing in Sam's truck in the photo below. Even though I retouched the photo to take out the Instagram arrows, it will not show here in its unblemished state.  But you get the idea!

In that case, we simply handed our full buckets up to that person, which sounds simple enough, but involved taking great care not to spill the sap.  Then we would take our now-empty gathering buckets, move on to other trees, and repeat the process.

When all of the sap had been gathered for that day, back we would go to the sugarhouse and begin the process of boiling it down.  This often took us until well into the evening.  We would bring the syrup to a specific temperature and then drain it off into a large kettle.  My mom finished it off on the kitchen stove and bottled it.


Then on the next day there was a good run of sap, we would do this all over again, and continue to do so until the buds came out on the maples and sugaring season ended.  It was hard work, but a great project to be involved with.

We continued this backyard sugaring operation until long after my brother and I were married, with families of our own. Often my brother would do the boiling; sometimes my husband (who had also grown up with sugaring) did.  We also had an elderly neighbor who was experienced at sugar making and often helped us out.  I think our kids were in high school when we finally gave it up.

So it was absolutely wonderful that our own kids could get to take part in this fabulous experience and piece of our family history.  These days, I'm thrilled to report that my daughter and her family have a little syrup making operation in their own back yard!  The photos below were taken when they tapped their trees.  Ari is holding sap spiles that fit into the holes drilled in the tree.  Then the sap buckets will hang from the hooks below the spiles. 


 Josiah is placing covers on the buckets.  You can see how my son-in-law marked the tapped trees with caution tape so they will be easily spotted.  Below, sap begins to drip into a bucket.
The tradition goes on!