Hey friends—three weeks into sugaring season and we’ve already pulled 5 gallons of homemade maple syrup from about 200 gallons of sap boiled down slow over endless oak, ash, and maple fires.

We’re smack in the middle of the season, with more sap flowing and wood to burn. 5 gallons now, 10-15 more expected. $18/quart jars. Some of this golden 66° Brix goodness is headed for pancake-fueled weekends, some for gifting to neighbors, and some we’ll sell to the surrounding community. Comment below (or DM) if local and interested (SE Wisconsin)!
Sap Keeps Coming, Fire Keeps Burning
Our 10-year tubing setup is still humming—healthy maples dripping steadily into jugs thanks to these perfect freeze/thaw cycles we’ve been getting. My husband and I take turns tending the evaporator around the clock. Meanwhile, our 6-year-old chops firewood like a little lumberjack (he’s getting scary good with that axe). And our 2-year-old daughter is absorbing the entire process.
That ~40:1 sap-to-syrup ratio means we’ve gone through a mountain of wood already. The air stays thick with that woodsmoke-sweet steam that chases away every bit of March chill—honestly, it’s my favorite part.

Those Quiet Evenings by the Flames
These firelit nights are pure magic. We watch the flames shifting from orange to fiery red as they devour log after log. That primal mix of crackling wood and caramelizing sap beats anything from a store bottle by a mile.
And when we filter and finish the syrup in the house, our entire house smells like a diner. I’ve commented about this during virtual meetings to my colleagues, who always get a chuckle, then ask me more about our syruping setup.
Kitchen Mishaps (Learning the Hard Way)
- Spigot fail: Husband cleaned it but didn’t reinstall properly—bumped the bucket and concentrated sap flooded our kitchen floor (sticky nightmare cleanup).
- Double boil-over: Syrup bubbled over twice, turning the stove into a sugar tar pit (vigilance lesson learned). Here’s hoping that doesn’t happen again.
What’s Next in the Sugar Shack
We’re hoping to finish strong with another 5-10 gallons total (fingers crossed the weather holds). Soon it’ll be time to filter everything through cheesecloth, bottle it up pretty, and label jars for neighbors, future sales, and of course our own pancake feasts. Can’t wait to taste test the first batch with that homemade rye bread from our recent Reuben quest.
Maple season = sauerkraut’s woodsmoke cousin—clear sap to liquid gold through fire, time, one pot at a time.
Any of you making syrup this season? What’s your boil ratio been like? Favorite tree to tap? Tell me everything below—I love swapping sugaring stories!
Practical Homesteading: growing food, raising kids, building community.
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