A local Amish family taps their large sugarbush each year, producing pure, delectable maple syrup. From pure sap to pure syrup. Nothing added. What you see is about one-third of it. That's a lot of sap![/caption]
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This past Saturday, "Eli" and his boys were still finishing the tapping in their sugarbush. Their faithful canine is always with them, keeping a watchful eye on the proceedings.[/caption]
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"Eli" and the boys heading out of the woods Saturday evening on their horse-drawn wagon. They will not gather sap on Sunday, but wait until Monday. They will not work on Sunday, except for normal everyday chores like feeding the livestock and milking the cows.[/caption]
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Some Amish use these plastic bags for tapping trees. They are very inexpensive, but don't last long - one season at most.[/caption]
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A shot of Dave's own boiling pan with a batch of syrup that is nearly finished. Yum![/caption]
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Monday evening. One of the Amish neighbors is taking a full tank-load of maple sap from his home farm to be boiled down in "Eli's" sugarhouse.[/caption]
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Smoke and steam rises from the sugarhouse on "Eli's" farm. Inside, there is a large overhead bulk tank that the sap is pumped into. At ground level, a large wood-and-coal fired evaporator boils off the water, producing a lovely cloud of steam. Gravity feeds the sap into the evaporator as needed through a hose with a valve to control the flow.[/caption]
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