1 Std. 3 Min.

Maple Syrup – With Chris Simmons & Ken St. Pierre Warden's Watch

    • Abenteuer Natur

Late winter and early spring can find a New England game warden with a little more free time than they’re used to, and many have found a sweet way to tap into one of the nature’s greatest springtime gifts. As maple syrup season draws to a close, we catch up with Maine’s Chris Simmons, of Simmons and Daughters Sugar House, and Ken St. Pierre, of Big Lake Maple in New Hampshire, to learn just what it takes to run a successful sugar house.


Our Sponsors:
Thin Green Line Podcast
Don Noyes Chevrolet
North American Game Warden Museum
Sovereign Sportsman Solutions
“A Cowboy in the Woods” Book
Hunt of a Lifetime
Maine's Operation Game Thief
Wildlife Heritage Foundation of NH
International Wildlife Crimestoppers

Here’s what we discuss:
·        Chris got started making syrup with his brothers on the family farm
·        Tapping and processing with whatever they could find
·        Ken was inspired by a colleague who tapped
·        “That’s an awful idea.”
·        Rebuilding a 100-year-old evaporator
·        The expense of expansion
·        Buckets vs. tap lines
·        Weather has made this season’s sap run unpredictable
·        Syruping can be an activity for the whole family
·        Can be as basic or as complex as you want it to be
·        “A heat source, a thermometer, a vessel, and sap.”
·        Make room for friends and neighbors!
·        Chris’ recipe for maple hot dogs
·        Natural syrup is an antioxidant
·        More than a topping: cooking with maple
·        Travel-sized containers can come in handy
·        Where to find Chris and Ken’s websites

Credits
Hosts: Wayne Saunders and John Nores
Producer: Jay Ammann
Art & Design: Ashley Hannett
Research / Content Coordinator: Stacey DesRoches
 
Subscribe:
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Amazon
Google
Waypoint
Stitcher
TuneIn
Megaphone
Find More Here:
Website
Warden’s Watch / TGL Store
Facebook
Facebook Fan Page
Instagram
Twitter
YouTube
RSS
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Late winter and early spring can find a New England game warden with a little more free time than they’re used to, and many have found a sweet way to tap into one of the nature’s greatest springtime gifts. As maple syrup season draws to a close, we catch up with Maine’s Chris Simmons, of Simmons and Daughters Sugar House, and Ken St. Pierre, of Big Lake Maple in New Hampshire, to learn just what it takes to run a successful sugar house.


Our Sponsors:
Thin Green Line Podcast
Don Noyes Chevrolet
North American Game Warden Museum
Sovereign Sportsman Solutions
“A Cowboy in the Woods” Book
Hunt of a Lifetime
Maine's Operation Game Thief
Wildlife Heritage Foundation of NH
International Wildlife Crimestoppers

Here’s what we discuss:
·        Chris got started making syrup with his brothers on the family farm
·        Tapping and processing with whatever they could find
·        Ken was inspired by a colleague who tapped
·        “That’s an awful idea.”
·        Rebuilding a 100-year-old evaporator
·        The expense of expansion
·        Buckets vs. tap lines
·        Weather has made this season’s sap run unpredictable
·        Syruping can be an activity for the whole family
·        Can be as basic or as complex as you want it to be
·        “A heat source, a thermometer, a vessel, and sap.”
·        Make room for friends and neighbors!
·        Chris’ recipe for maple hot dogs
·        Natural syrup is an antioxidant
·        More than a topping: cooking with maple
·        Travel-sized containers can come in handy
·        Where to find Chris and Ken’s websites

Credits
Hosts: Wayne Saunders and John Nores
Producer: Jay Ammann
Art & Design: Ashley Hannett
Research / Content Coordinator: Stacey DesRoches
 
Subscribe:
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Amazon
Google
Waypoint
Stitcher
TuneIn
Megaphone
Find More Here:
Website
Warden’s Watch / TGL Store
Facebook
Facebook Fan Page
Instagram
Twitter
YouTube
RSS
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

1 Std. 3 Min.