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The Rural Voice, 2001-03, Page 24The sweet history of maple syrup is as much about what hasn't changed as it is about what has. And some of the very maple trees in your bush, easily living well over 200 years under good conditions, might have witnessed eight generations or more of that history. Imagine cutting down an old maple tree near the end of its life for firewood, fondly remembering how you tapped it for its sweet sap, and then discovering the tap marks deep inside (like those shown in photo on page 24) that were left by your grandfather a hundred years earlier. That happened to Albert Martin curator of the Maple Syrup Museum of Ontario located in St. Jacobs, Ontario. While Mr. Martin is retired from farming, he hasn't retired from making syrup — and he'll always want to tell about it. When asked what changes he has seen over the years, he can describes the improve- ments in evaporating equipment, the official grading system introduced in the 1960s, and the changes in marketing of the maple products. But Martin, and most any long-time tapper, quickly comes back to what hasn't changed: "You still have to walk the bush and you still have to boil it." That was the case before the first European settlers learned the trade from Native Americans over 300 years ago; that was the case for the next 200 years when maple sugar was the standard sweetener on every North American table (it wasn't until 1875 that cane sugar first became available); and that is still the case 20 THE RURAL VOICE THERE'S A LOT OF MEMORIES IN THOSE WOODS Maple Syrup Museum tells the stories of the maple syrup industry in Ontario Story and photos by Larry Drew Albert Martin points to a spile crafted from a clothespin, and compares it to his father's "store-bought" design that he holds. through to today with 80 per cent of maple syrup still sold at the farm gate to supplement the incomes of farm families. Maple syrup bonds many generations. Many old-timers, farm -kids - forever, seem to be able to pull out of safekeeping, a spile or two that their parents or grandparents used — myself included. Even the trees have held onto a few relics over the years. In some cases the spiles themselves have been found encased deep inside the trees, still sitting in the tap holes made many years before. So varied are the spiles, spigits or spouts used over the years that they make for good collecting. Like stamps they all have the same purpose. But there is seemingly no end to the variation in their design. Take for example, the ingenuity of the fellow who drilled a hole lengthwise through some old clothespins (see photo) and fashioned wire hooks from which to hang his sap buckets. While early pioneers had little difficulty carving their own spiles, the industrialists were quick to re -invent the "mouse trap". The turn of the century cast iron spiles have so mdny small variations that I'mn sure it kept many a professional patent lawyer employed — and gave the salesman a new pitch. From steel, evolved the less expensive pressed -tin and aluminum spites. Martin recalls a salesman telling him that aluminum "gets more sap than steel" — but he found they bent too readily when hammered into the tap holes. So then came the cast aluminum with a reinforced "head" for the tappers to hammer - that is, just as easily as one could hammer the turn of the century version. One can also find a fascinating range of design with most any maple syrup equipment — but again with the same basic functions. Take for example the many ways to make a hole — patent lawyers must have loved it. The 1895 Montgomery Ward catalogue offers a range of hand -twisted carpenter's augers and breast drills, to your choice of no less than 16 patented designs of geared