Sue Nelson holds the first bottle of maple syrup made by her and her husband, Bob. |
Sue Nelson of rural Galion owns and operates Nelsonstrail with her husband, Bob. The Nelsons make top quality maple syrup from their Sugar Maple trees and harvest honey from their many hives of honey bees.
Over the next few days I will run the story that I wrote about the Nelsons for The Galion Inquirer here on O.C.J. Follow along to the Nelson's sugar bush and discover how they turn sugar water into tasty syrup. Caution: the process is not for the faint of heart...the Nelsons typical work day is 15+ hours!
Sweet steam rised from the Nelson's sugar house,
letting people know that maple syrup is being made.
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The Season Begins
We don’t normally
think of winter as a time of harvest, but throughout the Northern states and
Canada, a harvest that satisfies our sweet tooth is in full swing. It starts
with a not-so-gentle tap. It ends a tasty treat. What is it? Why, maple syrup,
of course. Here in Ohio the maple syrup season is going strong, thanks to cold
nights and warmer daytime temperatures, which keeps the sap (also called “sugar
water”) running in sugar maple trees. A grove of Sugar Maple trees is called a “sugar
bush”.
What began as a leisure pursuit to make maple syrup for
themselves, their family, and to give as gifts has turned into a hobby gone
wild according to Bob Nelson, of Nelsonstrail Maple Products. Bob and his wife,
Sue, turned their interest into a business in 2007 to defray the costs of the
new, state-of-the-art evaporator that they purchased to help make the syruping process
a little bit less labor intensive. On a cold, rainy day in late February, I spent an afternoon with the Nelson’s as
they boiled down their first run of the season, and believe me, even with fancy
equipment, making maple syrup is about as labor intensive as it gets.
The Nelson’s new evaporator, a huge wood-fired appliance that
boils the sugar water down into syrup, is made to handle up to 200 taps, and
that is exactly how many Bob and Sue drill. Some of the Nelson’s trees can
handle three taps and others only one, but most of the trees in the Nelson’s
sugar bush have two taps.
Unlike pipe-lines or buckets that one normally sees when
driving by a sugar bush, the Nelson’s use disposable dairy bags. Bob Nelson
says that he feels the bags are the most sanitary way for him to collect sap,
and it also saves the time that it takes to clean buckets. Nelson cautions anyone who wants to tap a few
trees on their own using old buckets to be very careful because lead was used
to seal the seams in galvanized buckets. Newer buckets are safer, and also
bucket liners can be purchased for older buckets.
Tune in tomorrow to read about what happens after the maple sap has been collected.
Marcheta *serial scribbler
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