
At-home maple syrup operations become a spring trend for Thunder Bay neighbours
CBC
The sight of Johnny De Bakker boiling gallons of maple sap in his driveway has become an annual event in the Mariday Park neighbourhood in Thunder Bay, Ont.
Families with strollers and dogs in tow stop by to peek at the steaming pot resting on a roaring propane burner, while others check inside the sap buckets resting on an old maple tree in the front yard.
"It's not something that a lot of people do, but I think it's becoming more and more popular for people to tap their trees at home. But, you know, certainly a lot of interest from the neighbours," said De Bakker.
"People want to stop and ask questions and that kind of thing. You know, unfortunately, I'm just an amateur, just a guy who's got a pot boiling on his driveway," he added while laughing.
De Bakker and his family have been tapping a decades-old silver maple tree in their front yard each spring for the last four years, and it's a trend that's picked up across the neighbourhood.
The people with the at-home syrup set ups wait for a temperature range of about -5 C and 5 C before tapping into the trees.
De Bakker said things were off to a slow start this year for his own operation, but in other parts of the country maple syrup producers have been hard at work with high hopes for the season ahead.
John Williams, executive director of the Ontario Maple Syrup Producers Association, said "every bush is different" in terms of sap production this season.
"Last year was one of the worst years on record, so if you're comparing to last year, this is a boomer year. It could actually turn out to be a record year if the temperature keeps going the way it is," he previously told CBC News.
But it not about the seasonal yield, or stocking shelves for the at-home maple syrup producers in Thunder Bay.
"That's sort of why we started the process," De Bakker said, referring to the family and neighborhood aspect of the at-home operation.
"My daughter's six now, and so it's fun. We go out and we check the buckets together ... and it's sort of something that the whole family can do together," he said.
If you walk around the northside neighborhood in the northwestern Ontario city, many homes have sap buckets fixed on their trees. The growing trend in the neighbourhood was started years ago thanks to Dick Henderson, who lives across the street from De Bakker.
"He did it for a number of years. And he told me that he was not going to do it anymore and I wasn't satisfied with that. So I decided it was my time to buy my own buckets and get a little set up and do it on my own," said De Bakker.