The Official U.S. Maple Syrup Almanac 2016 2016 | Page 6

T H E OFFICIAL UNITED STATES Maple Syrup Almanac 2016 4TH EDITION PUBLISHED BY 106 Main St. Greenwich, N.Y. 12834 www.themaplenews.com 518-692-2204 518-692-2205 fax USPS Number: 023-272 ISSN: 1930-2258 PUBLISHER Peter Gregg pgregg@ themaplenews.com ACCOUNT MANAGER Kate Ziehm kziehm@ themaplenews.com HIGHLIGHTS SEASON OF THE 2016 maple industry at a glance. What people were talking about … Massive crop Both the United States and Quebec enjoyed record breaking crops this season. The Quebec crop alone broke its record by 23 percent. In the U.S., Vermont, New York and Massachusetts all enjoyed their best state crops ever. On the marketing side, open house weekends were hampered by problematic scheduling. Easter fell in the prime fourth week in March, so many state associations pushed their open houses into April, which ended up being a freezing cold weekend in the Northeast. Attendance was reportedly down as a result. CDL LEADERS Jean-Marie Chabot and Daniel Lallane demonstrate the company’s popular new line of remote monitoring systems for the woods, pumphouse and sugarhouse. DESIGNER Michael Apuan CONTRIBUTORS Betty Ann Lockhart Don Lockhart Deborah Jeanne Sergeant Barbara Lassonde Blair Smith, NASS/USDA ON THE COVER: Grottoli’s Sugarhouse in Middle Granville, N.Y. on March 18 The Official U.S. Maple Syrup Almanac comes free with a subscription to The Maple News. ©Atticus Communications, Inc. 6 Monitoring systems catch on More and more sugarmakers were quickly adding revolutionary sugarbush monitoring systems in their woods. The 2016 season saw the biggest usage yet of the rapidly advancing technology. The systems can tell a sugarmaker exactly where a leak is located on a line, or if a tank is overflowing at a remote location, all on their smartphones. Suddenly, having precise information on every aspect of an operation has become an essential tool in modern syrup making. U.S. Maple Syrup Almanac 2016