On March 23, 2016

Sugaring in the Fourth Grade

Killington Elementary 4th Grade Students Sugaring

Photos Courtesy of Robin Alberti

By Clara J. Shortle

Sugaring in the fourth grade is a lot of work, but it is also lots of fun. I know this because I am one of these fourth graders at Killington Elementary School.

The process is complicated, but I will try to explain it in the words that I understand. It is a great educational project full of surprises.

First, in the fall, you go and check the tubing lines, if you have plastic tubing, which our school does. Next, in the spring you get taps, buckets, a drill, lids for the buckets, hooks to hang the buckets from and a hammer. Then go up on a trail that has many maple trees. To tap, first you drill a hole that is about 1½ inch deep. Second, you attach the hook to the tap and gently tap it in with the hammer. Third, you hang the bucket from the hook. Finally, you put the lid on and let the sap run.

Then collect the sap every day or so until you have 20 gallons. Then boiling starts.

This is almost every fourth grader’s favorite part of sugaring.

To boil, your evaporator needs to be cleaned. To do this, boil water though it to clean it out from last year’s sap boiling. Then fill the oil tank if it needs to be filled. After the water has boiled through you start to put the sap in. First, though, you put on a filter. You pour sap into the pre-heat part of the evaporator until it is full. Once the sap in the pre-heat part has warmed to the proper temperature, you twist the valve to let the sap pour into the sections until it looks about the right height. Then you twist the valve so the sap just drips out of it. Next you measure the height of the sap in the evaporator with a dowel.  If it is too high, you recycle the sap. The evaporator has a valve on the far side that you turn, holding a pan underneath it, and fill the pan half full. You return the partially boiled sap back to the beginning. Repeat this process every time the level gets too high. Also, add more sap as the sap condenses into syrup. Do this until it is very thick and is syrup.

The fourth graders can also tap trees at home and bring in sap to school for boiling. This is a very exciting part of the fourth grade.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Ray Garrett, 62

January 8, 2025
Ray Garrett was lost to the many who loved him on his 62nd birthday. He had a heart attack while kitesurfing in one of his favorite places in Brazil. It was a beautiful day with steady winds, and Ray was excited to be on the water with his dear friends. Ray was born on Oct.…

Okemo, ahead of the pack

January 8, 2025
By Karen D. Lorentz Editor’s note: This is Part 2 of a three-part series that explores how innovations at Okemo and Killington enabled them to become successful and popular ski resorts that also contributed to the growth of the ski industry in Vermont and the East. Okemo Ski Area, which debuted Jan. 31, 1956, was…

A trip most dads can only dream of…

January 8, 2025
How many dads out there can say they spent 22-days and 5,000 miles in a minivan with their 22-year-old musician daughter as she gigged her way from coast to coast? Well, journalist and college professor at Castleton David Blow can. And now, after five years in the works having been derailed by Covid, Blow is…

Marble Valley Fire: Safeguarding businesses with safety solutions

January 8, 2025
By James Kent As the new year begins, business owners must maintain their safety standards as they review goals for 2025. In Rutland and Windsor counties, Marble Valley Fire’s fire safety equipment and services positively impact these efforts. Marble Valley Fire’s owner Mike Roy’s commitment to fire safety is deeply rooted in his extensive background…