The Letdown Alone in the evaporator room at 5pm – the green hose snaked across the cement floor that cools her feet, a dish rag draped over the counter, the rag laden with six screw-and-nut ensembles resembling barbells, four more nuts in a line, and two rows of four washers each, the woodshed doors both… Read More
Early April Woods Report
Crew member Larry Lackey writes: On the woods crew’s agenda for early April has been to check for and repair leaks in the sap collection lines. This was the third time around for most sections of the bush. The problem is not sap leaking out, but rather air leaking in to the tubes, reducing the vacuum… Read More
The Post-it Wall
WEATHER: “Oh dear, what do I say about the weather?” asks the Blog Editor of Chief of Operations as he fills the wood stove and lights a fire for the evening. “Everybody talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it,” he replies. “Isn’t that a Mark Twain saying? Or was there a different… Read More
March Snows to a Close
WEATHER: Today read like the final, summarizing paragraph of a March weather essay; the theme was “See how erratic the battle between sun and frost can be.” The day began with a frosty temp of 20 degrees. Morning sun quickly dispelled the chill…then clouds dampened the mood…then it snowed hard and is still snowing…then by… Read More
The Light Show
QUICK UPDATE: The week ahead looks promising for sap runs. We boiled on Saturday the 18th. Today seems like a classic sugaring day – fair skies, a nippy wind, a temp of 40 mid-day to be followed by a night in the low 20’s – but the sap is only jogging, I won’t venture an… Read More
The More it Snows
The more it snows the higher the reading at the stake on Mt. Mansfield. It’s now at 86″ which is respectable for this date. The snow depth at the stake has been measured since 1954. Its elevation is 3900′. The more it snows the less space there is for Mike to plow the snow off… Read More
On the Cusp of a Sap Run
WEATHER, March 11th: As ever with sugar season the story is the weather. Yesterday sure felt like a sugaring day: it felt like picnic weather in the sun, snowbanks by the road receded before my eyes, and mud squished around my rubber boots on the lower section of Falls Brook Lane. But it just wasn’t… Read More
Early March Mailbag
Dear Reader, Winter finally arrived: the cold and snow buttoned up the trees, silenced the pump in the sap shed, and hastened the crew back to hearth and home. It’s time to reach into the long-neglected mailbag and pull out your questions, comments, and photos. I’ll try to get to as many of your inquiries… Read More
Earliest First Boil: February 16th
WEATHER: For 48 hours from Wednesday morning to Friday morning (2/15-2/17) the temps stayed above freezing, in the high 30’s to mid 40’s. During Friday the temp plummeted to the teens. New snow thickened the sky but didn’t amount to much. Saturday (2/18) remains below freezing. A thaw is forecasted for Sunday afternoon. HOW’S IT… Read More
Tapped by Valentine’s Day and None Too Soon
Up in the woods tapping maple trees on a recent sunny day, crew member and resident folklorist Lawrence Lackey happened to glance uphill and could scarcely believe his eyes. Why, it was the phantom tapper! LL (as he is known in these parts) later sang to the crew what he recalls of The Ballad of… Read More