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The Rural Voice, 2000-03, Page 28OPPORTUNITY TAPS Ontario is still an importer of maple syrup and there's an opprotunity to expand the industry. You may not get rich but there are other attractions to the business, producers say. By Keith Roulston There are more reasons than money to get into the maple syrup business, says Dick O'Brien, past president of the Ontario Maple Syrup Producers Association, but there's money.to be made too. "There's nothing like it in the spring," O'Brien says of the process of tapping trees, collecting sap and boiling it to make maple syrup. It's a great way to feel the pulse of the season picking up, he says. There seem to be a good number of people interested in getting into maple syrup production, says O'Brien who also sells equipment for maple syrup production. In Quebec, the largest maple syrup production area in the world, there are both new producers and rapid expansion of existing producers. If production is expanding in Quebec there's even more reason to produce Maple syrup in Ontario because Ontario can't satisfy its own market demand and imports maple syrup, O'Brien says. Many Ontario producers have the opportunity to sell virtually everything they make at retail prices, not wholesale, O'Brien says though there are also wholesale opportunities for producers who want to sell to others who can't meet the retail demand through their own production. "If you make quality maple syrup in Ontario you have no trouble selling it," O'Brien says. __ He also sees the opportunity to the Grey -Bruce area to set standards for superb quality syrup. Soil in the area is over a limestone base, similar to Lanark County in eastern Ontario, generally recognized as the home of the best quality syrup. The same conditions exist on St. Joseph Island in Georgian Bay where maple syrup production is expanding so rapidly that O'Brien jokes there soon won't be a bush on the island that isn't producing maple syrup. People can get into maple syrup at any level from very small to a true business, says O'Brien who started very small himself in his Priceville-area bush. When he started he got plans that are still available for turning a 45 -gallon drum into an evaporator stove, got someone to build him a stainless steal evaporator pan to fit on top of it, and tapped trees using buckets. The second year he added a little pipeline and slowly learned as he went along before deciding to go bigger and getting into professional equipment. Canadian Maple `+} Keep refrigerated "der dans un endrait' i.tiien Sirclp d' 26 THE RURAL VOICE Maple syrup production can also be a first entrepreneurial endeavour for young family members. David Pullen got into the business when he was 10 and his younger brother Michael was eight, tapping a few trees around the yard of his parents' farm near Clinton. Their father Don set up an old flat pan for them to boil down the syrup. Each year they grew a little until they had about 500 taps. Today Pullen. operates McCulley's Hill Farm near St. Marys with 2,000 taps. Nobody's getting rich from maple syrup, he .warns, but he has expanded his operation by offering an agritourism business, with tours of the bush and evaporator. He and his wife Darlene also operate a farm market selling fruits and vegetables and other farm produce. While some start small and build, there are others in Ontario who have decided they had the bush and they wanted to go directly to a commercial size of 1,000 to 2,000 taps. If you have the bush and you have the knowledge and you have the money, O'Brien says you might want to aim for 1,000 to 2,000 taps, buying equipment that can handle that volume, even if you start out at half that amount of production. So, what's involved in getting started? First of all, do research and get some advice from others. There's a good reference book called The Maple Syrup Producer's Manual that costs $14.95 and is one of the best investments you can make, he says. There's also a CD ROM called Maple INFO that can be ordered through the Ontario Maple Syrup Producers' Association website www.ontariomaple.com and information on the University of Guelph's website but you need to be computer literate to get the most out of the online information, he says.. Besides research, get advice from others in the business. "I still visit other operators to get ideas," he says. Much can be gained by looking at others operations because "different people have different ideas". How much bush do you need? O'Brien says the rule of thumb is about 80 taps per acre (some larger trees have more than one tap). It means there are many woodlots in Grey -Bruce large enough to produce valuable quantities of syrup. Though the standard is that a producer needs 1,000 taps to be of commercial size, O'Brien says that study takes into