Hartwick Pines State Park to host Maple Syrup Day March 23

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Press Release


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 12, 2013

Contact: Craig Kasmer or Rob Burg, 989-348-2537 or Ed Golder, 517-335-3014


Hartwick Pines State Park to host Maple Syrup Day March 23 

Plan to spend the day at Hartwick Pines State Park in Grayling on Saturday, March 23, and enjoy learning about North America’s oldest agricultural product, maple sugar! Festivities begin at 10 a.m. at the Hartwick Pines Visitor Center  and last until 4 p.m. Visitors to the park are invited to:

  • Walk into the sugar bush to help tap a maple tree
  • Observe the boil-down process which converts maple sap to maple syrup
  • Learn about the history of maple sugar making in North America
  • Watch the videos “Maple Sugar Farmer,” “Maple Sugaring” and “The Maple Sugaring Story”
  • Ask an expert about how to start making maple syrup and tap trees in your own backyard
  • Enjoy a pancake breakfast (all day long) courtesy of Grayling Boy Scout Troop 979
  • Taste maple sap and the finished maple syrup
  • Purchase genuine maple sugar candy and syrup

Children can participate in tapping a maple tree and will learn how to build their own "mokuk" - a birch bark container in which native peoples transported maple sugar. Making a paper mokuk replica provides a history lesson and discussion about how European settlers learned of the Native Americans’ sugaring culture.

Tree-tapping demonstrations will take place at 10:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 2:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. in the sugar bush and some visitors will be able to help tap the maple trees.

For the second year, Grayling Boy Scout Troop 979 will provide guests with a pancake breakfast topped with Michigan maple syrup. They’ll have pancakes on the griddle all day. Donations will be accepted.

Visitors will be able to taste maple syrup and sap, smell the aroma around an outside evaporator pan, and welcome spring at this fun, educational event. Maple recipes will be available for those wishing to savor the sweetness of the day.

The Department of Natural Resources, including the Hartwick Pines Visitor Center and Logging Museum, and the Friends of Hartwick Pines State Park cosponsor this special event. The park is located at 4216 Ranger Road in Grayling. For more information, call the park at 989-348-7068 or visit www.michigan.gov/hartwickpines.

There is no fee for this event, however a Recreation Passport is required for entry to the park. 

The Recreation Passport is an easy, affordable way for residents to enjoy and support outdoor recreation opportunities in Michigan. By checking "YES" for the $11 Recreation Passport ($5 for motorcycles) when renewing a license plate through the Secretary of State (by mail, kiosk, online at www.expresssos.com or at branch offices), Michigan motorists get access to state parks, recreation areas, state forest campgrounds, nonmotorized state trailhead parking and state boat launches. In addition, Recreation Passport holders can enjoy real savings at businesses and retailers that participate in the Passport Perks discount program. The Recreation Passport is valid until the next license plate renewal date. Nonresidents can purchase the Recreation Passport ($30.50 annual; $8.40 daily) at any state park or recreation area or through the Michigan e-Store at www.michigan.gov/estore.

Learn more about this creative way of sustaining Michigan's outdoor recreation and natural resources at www.michigan.gov/recreationpassport. For information on Passport Perks shopping discounts or how businesses and retailers can enroll in the program, visit www.michigan.gov/passportperks.


The Michigan Department of Natural Resources is committed to the conservation, protection, management, use and enjoyment of the state’s natural and cultural resources for current and future generations. For more information, go to www.michigan.gov/dnr.