Georg Edelmann's Weblog Georg's Weblog

Sunday Mar 16, 2008

You probably heard the term "Liquid Gold" in lots of different context e.g. oil, the melted precious metal, water in the desert, etc. Here in New England, when winter's breath is shallow, and spring has not yet woken up, liquid gold has a distinct meaning. It's the magic that happens when you pierce a maple tree to draw its juice, and boil it until the sugar content reaches 66-67 percent to create maple syrup.

This weekend, Kimberley and I had a great time creating our very own liquid gold. We tapped 7 trees with 12 taps, and collected about 35 gallons of maple tree sap. Boiling the sap in a home made evaporator, kept us occupied over both days. I'm just about to finish the process on our kitchen stove. I expect 4-5 pints of the finished product today.

Here comes the science bit. Sap turns into maple syrup when the boiling point reaches 7.1 degree Fahrenheit over the boiling point of water, which is dependant of your elevation and local barometric pressure. Today, at our home this is 216 degree Fahrenheit.

The not so scientific approach, is to stick a cold spoon into the boiling sap and watch it drip from the spoon. If it is "sheeting", your syrup is ready. Of course licking the spoon is part of the process, which makes this my preferred testing method.

For centuries, alchemists tried to turn all kind of materials into gold without success, when all the time the real liquid gold was just a boil away.

Friday Mar 14, 2008

Like every year, our local town calls upon its town people to step up and vote for a set of articles that were published beforehand in the town report. Articles are very concrete, well documented proposal, mainly around raising funds for causes like a new police cruiser, a new bridge that was washed away in the floods two years ago, the creation of a reserve fund for the costs that the town will incur in the 2010 revaluation exercise. You get the idea. In most cases, it means your personal property taxes will go up if you vote "Yes".

Our town meeting was this week, and for the first time, Kimberley and I attended. It was an astounding experience from a couple of angles.

Let's talk about the format of the meeting first. Imagine a decent sized town hall, with about 150 attendees, eager to get going. You need some form of process to make sure you get decision on the 20 or so articles in a timely, and most importantly, predictable manner. I was thinking about how this can be done before the meeting, but never envisioned to see what kind of well oiled machine I will encounter. The system that was used is called "Robert's Rule of Order". Suffice to say, that the "Robert rules" provide a superb framework for the meeting. Have a look at the website, it's impressive. I bought the book already.

Secondly, it was the high degree of asserting direct power of the future of our town. Money does talk, and we had our voice. Next time, I see our local police officer drive past in his new cruiser, I know I paid a piece of the $33.000 machine. Good stuff, and so much more direct that the income tax we pay to the IRS.

Lastly, I was especially interested in the articles that were voted down. Like this one. The planning board asked for an additional $10.000 to pay for a traffic research at one of the local intersection. One could sense, that the crowd had no desire to spend any more money on this issue. I actually think, people did not see that there was a problem to start with, despite the passionate pleas of the representative from the planning board.

Oh, there was a bit of a bonus as well. The state capital newspaper covered the event, and Kimberley and I ended up on the front page of the Concord Monitor the day after the meeting. Check out the picture below, we're the couple on the balcony just left of the centre.