Showing posts with label Poems about Maple Sugaring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poems about Maple Sugaring. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Our Sugar House - Places & Making Things

 
Oh Boy!
by Amy LV


Students - it's that time of year again. If you live in the Northeastern US or Canada, and if you live in the country, and if you have sugar maples in your yard, and if you like to sit around and watch things boil...then it's your time. Sugaring time! For the past few years, our family has boiled maple syrup. We started by boiling on our grill burner. Then we moved to a little fire pit made from cinder blocks and a canning pot...and this year we have our own evaporating pan! Thanks to our good friend John Hitchings, who has taught us about syruping, we are getting better and better organized. We don't make lots of syrup, just a bit for us to enjoy. So far we have three quarts this year. All from one tree!

This poem is about a place, a small place called a sugar house. That's where many people boil their syrup, in tiny shed-like houses or big buildings that hold an evaporating pan, a couple of chairs, and some supplies. Commercial operations are quite large, but many people just boil a bit of backyard syrup. We still boil outside, but maybe someday we'll have a sugar house, or sugar shack, of our own.

You will notice that this is a poem with a pattern. Each stanza has four lines, and lines two and four of each stanza always rhyme with each other. When I write rhyming poems, the most important thing for me is that the rhymes make sense. Yes, I could have rhymed "sap" with "map." But why would I do that? Meaning is most important when writing a poem or anything else.

The idea for today's poem came from two thoughts. First, I got thinking about special places, and our friend John's cozy sugar shack came to mind since we just visited it. Next, we have been making maple syrup, and I like writing poems about making things.

Where is a special small place where you like to spend time?

What have you made lately?

If you want to write about a lot of different things, one way to do this is to try making a lot of different things. Look around your house and make up some crafts. Or ask if you can help cooking or gardening or fixing things. The more we do, the more we know, the more we know...the more writing ideas we have!

For another poem about maple sugaring, go back to last year and read Tap Sap Lap.

To read more about syruping, I again recommend this article, How to Tap Maple Trees and Make Maple Syrup, from the University of Maine Extension.

To watch a video of maple sugaring, watch this video, "Maple Syrup in the Making at Yardley's Sugarhouse."


May your day be sweet!

2 Quarts of 2012 Syrup
Photo by Amy LV

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Friday, March 11, 2011

Poetry Friday & It's Maple Sugaring Time!



Our Sap Buckets
Photo by Amy LV


We are tapping a few sugar maples here in the yard!  It certainly would not have happened if our son Henry had not gotten things going this afternoon.  Our eight-year-old Henry found the sap buckets, cleaned the sap buckets, and tapped the trees.  He was "the little red hen of syruping!"  (But we hope he shares with us.) 

It takes 40 gallons of sap to make a gallon of syrup, so we won't have a lot of syrup, but we will boil a few jars full on a cinder block chimney fire in the yard, and oh will we enjoy those pancakes.  Thank you, Henry!

This is not #9 in my series of poems about reading.  Because Wednesday was Read Aloud Day, I wrote and posted Reading Aloud right on that day.

Students - It is healthy and good to make things.  At the end of February. over at A Year of Reading, Franki posted a fantastic post about the power of making things as well as many things her school has done to "make things to make a difference."  Any children, teachers, or parents who wish to instill a love of making and helping others should read this post.  Teachers - if you teach a "how to" unit in writing, this would be a wonderful direction to take.

Franki also links to Amy Krouse Rosenthal's video 17 Things I Made.  Don't miss it.  This weekend I cannot wait to learn more about stitching together handmade books at the Western New York Book Arts Center.  And in two weeks, this same center hosts International Edible Book Festival.  This is the time to see if there your city or town celebrates edible books on April 1.

If you would like to learn about maple sugaring, head over to "How to Tap Maple Trees and Make Maple Syrup" posted by the University of Maine.  And for a warm and funny post about the comparison between sugaring and parenting, do not miss Bill's Saturday post over at Daddled.

Liz is hosting Poetry Friday over at Liz in Ink today.  Enjoy tapping everyone's posts for richness, wonder, humor, and beauty.

Countdown to National Poetry Month...20 days!

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