It’s that time again. And I love it.
Steam and fire, wind and sleet
This shack’s where in- and outside meet
Before this gift here’s at its finish will
Meet heat and coal to quite diminish
All from a boil that allows the clear
And cold run sap to disappear
Up through the air as tiny drops
Float up and up (to the treetops?)
Which leave behind the golden stick
That boils and boils from thin to thick
And ends up in my coffee, tea
(And fingers, quite in spite of me)
Oh for the sake of sweet so fine
I labor here to make it mine.
But before the sugar shack I have
To make my way ’round yard and back
Where buckets wait in mystery
With treasures held for me to see
I peek inside each one with great
Big hope as I anticipate
How much? How much? lies there within
That bucket; is it thick or thin
With sap, oh tree, are you ready to
Share what’s yours with me, are you?
Is it time? Is it now?
(I’m a child who’s waited all year through
For this present once again that’s new!)
Emptying time.
I grab the buckets, lift, unload
The metal’s cold, my muscles groan.
I set my face
Quicken my pace
Through mud, grass, leaves, and ice or snow
Forth and back through taps and trees
I wonder how the count will be
Will I run out of storage space
Or need to slow my boiling pace
For smaller yields and lesser gains?
No matter what, I’ll take these pains
For nectar sweet as honeybees’
Maple syrup time requires of me.
And when I start to tire or feel
The weight of work I do so real
I stop and breathe the crisp new breath
Of spring’s onset and winter’s death
The air is fresh the work is good:
This mix of fire, sap, steam, and wood
And all this bounty’s yielded up
In this li’l yard from nature’s cup
The gold brown gift on counter sits
For king or peasant present fit
A taste so good, pure, and unique
It needs no help, no aid, no tweak
But to watch the boil, this takes a bit
Of preference, here I do admit
To decide how much to load the fire
And when, how much, in order to
Each facet must be much thought through
Or not; sometimes I’ll let it be
And not take things so seriously
There’s oft a rhythm there’s oft some fun
(A time for each thing ‘neath the sun!)
To sit, to work, to watch, to try
And delight in time that passes by
The process by which it comes about
I just can’t say enough about
‘Cause I get to stand and watch and wait
And walk and load, elucidate
And wonder, move and load again
(And again and again and again and again.)
How many jobs are under heaven
Where work’s the dough and time’s the leaven
That allows for a product
From patience and grace
Quite without all attempts to quicken the pace?
I’m the watchman, the gatherer, the participant here
