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Old Sturbridge Village, Maple Days
March 9 @ 9:30 am - 4:00 pm EST
For many at Old Sturbridge Village, the first whiff of spring isn’t the aroma of spring flowers – it’s the smell of wood smoke and maple syrup, a sure sign that the sap is rising and spring is on the way. Join us for “Maple Days” select dates in March, when the Village’s working sugar camp demonstrates maple sugaring as it was done in early 19th-century New England.
See the entire sugar-making process, from tapping the trees to “sugaring off,” and learn why maple sugar was more commonly used than maple syrup in early New England.
Costumed historians will also cook period foods made with maple products and the tinner and cooper will make maple-related items.
Treat Yourself to Waffles
On Saturdays and Sundays during Maple Days, join us in Ox & Yoke Café from 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. for a special Waffle Bar, featuring made-to-order waffles and a variety of scrumptious toppings to create your delicious masterpiece! The Waffle Bar is $12.99 per person, and members save 10%.
Friday – Sunday, February 23rd – March 17th
Times: The Village is open from 9:30 am to 4:00 pm.
Coming a distance? Check out our Maple Days lodging package
The Tools
While the modern process of collecting maple sap stirs images of metal spiles and buckets, early 19th-century New Englanders used several wooden tools!
The Labor
Producing maple sugar is a lot of work! Sap must be collected and boiled for a long time. It takes 35-40 gallons of sap to make one gallon of syrup. That one gallon of syrup can make 6 to 8 pounds of sugar!
The Goal
Today, maple syrup is typically the goal! We love the golden liquid on pancakes and waffles. In early 19th-century New England, however, maple sugar was the ultimate goal! Even more than that, the goal was to make maple sugar that tasted more like regular sugar than maple sugar.
Why Do We Put Maple Syrup On Pancakes?
Here at the Village, we often discuss how early New Englanders tended to make maple sugar rather than maple syrup. This sugar could be used in baking just like cane sugar.
Most modern Americans, however, tend to enjoy maple syrup on things like pancakes instead. A couple of our historians weighed in on the history of maple syrup on pancakes in a recent article on Martha Stewart’s website. Click the button below to check it out.
Read the Article |
Did You Know?
- Production of maple syrup is one of only a few agricultural processes in North America that is not a European colonial import.
- Maples are usually tapped beginning between 30 and 40 years of age. Maples can continue to be tapped for sap until they are more than 100 years old.
- Once temperatures stop fluctuating between below freezing at night and above freezing during the day, sap stops flowing.
SHOP
Be sure to also stop by our shops for sweet treats like maple syrup and candy—plus a wide variety of other maple-themed items for your home. Every purchase in our shops supports the educational mission of Old Sturbridge Village!
Featured products include:
- Local maple syrup
- Assorted maple mustards from Butternut Mountain Farm of Vermont
- Maple soaps and lotions from Farmer’s Body of Vermont
- Puzzles featuring maple sugar camp scenes
- Maple-themed cookbooks