
Sugar maples display bright yellows, oranges and crimson hues. Red maples show a fiery red color. Silver maples turn yellow, sometimes orange or red, but the leaves brown before they fall from the tree.

Being an avid wildcrafter and outdoors kinda gal I’ve been chumping at the bit to forage and herb around outside. I harvested Winter roots, buds, barks, Chickweed under the snow but was anxious for sugarin season! You know the sap is running when the temps are 40ish during the day and 20’s or so at night. The past month or so fit this pattern and the results have been SWEET!
A friend from northern Minnesota, Bob Stauffer, has a big time Sugarin production, tapping 300 trees! He crafted these Y shaped tubes for me to collect the sap from two places on a large trunk and we just made a single hole in the lid of 5 gallon buckets. This fancy set up is not really necessary. A primitive skills expert here in Todd taps 75 Sugar Maples every year and uses Sumac stalks that have been hollowed out as the spiles and empty plastic gallon jugs to collect the sap. Bethany and Hannah helped me collect Sumac branches but I have yet to use them as spiles, the pith is easy to remove leaving a hollow spile for tapping. Next year I will do a bigger operation and use them then.
A tree needs to be at least 12 inches in diameter to be tap worthy. This Maple has such girth that I attached too buckets to collect it’s sap. Notice the rocks around the base of each bucket to anchor in place and also the rocks on top of the lids to keep them from blowing off.

Almost full after only changing the bucket less than 24 hours before. I love to hear the plunk of the sap into the buckets.

Since I can’t lift the 5 gallon buckets I transfer the sap into gallon glass jugs to take home for boiling.

Boiling on the stove top….for hours. Clear Maple sap tasty like pure water with a twinge of sweetness to it. The brown liquid in the glass jug jar in front is the final boiled down syrup.

Interesting to watch the color of the boiled sap deepen as it is boiled. The finished product is not only a honey brown but also thick and syrupy.
Yes, I am aware that I am crazy… this is the culmination of lots of boiling and ‘wasting’ of electricity. BUT oh it tastes soooooo good. No wonder Maple syrup prices are steep! Jason helped me pour the syrup into waiting glass jug bottles and poured to fast the first time resulting in a a huge mess on the stove top. Using droppers we syringed every drop of the liquid gold into the jar. Next year, I will tap many Maples and use an outdoor mapling pan over a fire pit to save electricity!
Maple syrup at long last! It tastes amazing. Jason was so thrilled! I plan on making Maple scones for my next wild food class! and butternut squash soup with MAPLE syrup (click on links to see the recipes)

The final product from tree to plate…. ooooh baby! So I splurged and made sourdough bread french toast topped with strawberries as a platform for the Maple syrup! Alone with the fried egg and bacon are some rather burned potato peels that I fried in the bacon grease (I don’t throw much if anything away…ever) and Dandelion root coffee for the perfect touch!

Jason and I have been trying to eat gluten free for the past few years. These banana almond butter egg paleo pancakes are our favorites. The Maple syrup is so delicious! As we ate dinner we had daffodils on the table but snow quietly falling outside the windows.
It is now March 23 and the sap continues to flow and I am still eagerly collecting every drop. I love to drink the fresh sap straight from the tree as well (it tastes like the best water EVER!) I’ll be posting my favorite Maple syrup recipes in the cooking section of my blog and using the harvest to sweeten wild menus for many an upcoming WILD event at Wild Blessings! Join me!
AND I am sending this blog entry to Butter Wilde’s Wild Things Round UP at hungerandthirstforlife.blogspot.com
So wonderful! I don’t have sugar maples here, and we don’t get the perfect temps even if I did. So reading your blog is as close as I can get to it. Thanks so much!
Thanks Heather, I’m glad you can tap trees vicariously with me! 🙂 Holly
So interesting!
Is there any special procedure to dig the wholes in the tree? And what after “tapping season”? Is there something special to do to avoid the tree to loose sap?
Is it legal to tap trees in the wild?
Please email your gluten free pancake recipe to me. Thanks. They look so good in the picture
It brings back found memories of childhood. I use to tap trees. I made copper taps from 1/2″ copper pipe and would use 2L pop bottles to hang on them. The neck is hard which would allow me to hang them on the taps. Because the top is mostly covered, it would prevent a lot of tree bark from falling into them. I had about 12 trees or so, some to small to really have a tap in them, but had fun none the less.
Later I found out that the copper was toxic to trees, so it might have been better to make them out of galvanized, but it was a lot of fun. I actually peeled the wall paper off the walls of the family house one year….. Ya my parents were not happy about that 🙂
Copper taps, cool idea, and then I read on about it being toxic to trees… It’s getting close to sugarin season again and I plan on tapping Birch and Hickories this year too.