Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2003-03, Page 24A sweet tale to .tell Saugeen Bluffs Conservation Area shows the long history of maple sgrup making, from native dabs to the present By Keith Roulston Acentury and a half ago when European settlers, many of them with little experience on the land, tried to survive in the rough pioneer life in the bush, they learned one survival technique from the native population that Canadians have been enjoying every spring since: tapping maple trees for sap and boiling it down to sweet syrup and sugar. In the many years since, maple syrup making, like farming, has changed forever as labour-saving devices and food safety concerns have had their effect. But for school children and adults visiting Saugeen Bluffs, north of Paisley, each spring, there's a chance to see the whole long history of maple -syrup -making on display. The Saugeen Conservation Authority's maple syrup demonstrations began back in 1979 and now each spring about 1,500 students from 40 schools in Bruce, Grey and Huron Counties visit Saugeen Bluffs, three kilometers north of Paisley to learn how maple syrup has been made over the centuries: As well, during Maple Madness weekend, this year on Saturday, March 29 and Sunday, March 30, (10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.) adults get a chance to visit the site themselves and partake of this coming -of - spring institution. Grades 2 and 3 are targeted for the school tours because maple syrup relates to their curriculum, but groups from nursery schools to seniors homes also book visits. Meanwhile secondary school students from Kincardine District Secondary School assist in setting up the displays, teaching the students and cleaning up at the end of the day. It's a hands-on experience for students. There's a native encampment where students learn the legend of how maple syrup was discovered. Using forked sticks, participants learn the hard way just how much back -breaking labour was involved for natives as they move rocks from the fire to a hollow log filled with sap. The natives used the rocks to heat the sap to boiling and had to keep removing cooled rocks and adding new hot rocks to keep the sap boiling until it turned into sugar. For natives this was the one source they had of sugar to sweeten their food. The dry product kept well throughout the year, was easier to store and to transport. Maple syrup comes from a relatively small part of North 20 THE RURAL VOICE Students visiting Saugeen Bluffs (top) learn how trees were tapped in the early days before modern technology. Below a demonstration helps people learn more about where sap comes from in a maple tree. Some 1,500 students a year tour the site near Paisley. -Photos courtesy Saugeen Valley Conservation Authority