How to Participate
If
Sugar Maple trees grow where you live, we hope you'll participate
in Journey North's maple sugaring study. Although the trees look
drab and gray in February, amazing changes are about to occur
on the inside. Before leaf-out each spring, Sugar Maple trees
produce a sweet sap that can be made into sugar. Learn how to
tap a maple—and report the date of your FIRST sap run to
Journey North.
Note:
Even if you can't tap a tree, you can watch for the first sap
to run. Simply find a broken branch on a Maple tree—and
report to Journey North when the first sap flows.
If
you have adopted a Sugar Maple for the leaf-out study this spring,
you can track the phenology of your adopted maple tree on this
chart:
- Learn
how to tap a maple—and report the date of your FIRST sap
run to Journey North.
Even if you can't tap a tree, you can watch for the first sap
to run. Simply find a broken branch on a Maple tree—and
report to Journey North when the first sap flows.
|
Adopt
a maple tree this spring
and keep track of changes on this chart.
Sugaring Spring Phenology |