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Nova Scotia

Warm winter, storm damage from Fiona could hamper N.S. maple syrup production

Maple syrup producers are bracing for an uncertain season as an unusually warm winter lingers.

Mild weather could cause short sugaring season this year

Maple producers say they're uncertain what this sugaring season will look like, since the province has seen a milder winter than usual. (Robert F. Bukaty/Associated Press)

Maple syrup producers are bracing for an uncertain season as an unusually warm winter lingers in the province.

Nova Scotia saw one of the mildest Januaryson record this year, with warmer temperatures and less snowfall than usual.

For optimal sap flow, maples need cold, frosty nights of about 5 C and warmer, sunny days of about 5 C.

"If it continues like this, it will be a poor year because you're just not going to have the flows," says Chris Hutchinson.

Hutchinson isthe owner of Hutchinson Acres, which taps about 60,000 trees in the interior of western Nova Scotia, roughly between Aylesford and Bridgewater.

He saysproducers need cold weather to tap their trees becauseif they tap when it's warm, the spilesused for collectingsapfallout when the temperature drops.

"The whole month of December, January, we've never had more than one or two days with a minus."

Hutchinson had already tapped many of his trees in January, but when the province was hit with extreme cold in early February, about 40 per cent of histaps fell out, so he and his crew had to go around and pound them all back in.

He was busy in the woods tapping when he spoke with the CBC on the phone early Tuesday, but Hutchinson saysit's possible he will miss some sap if he can't finish tapping in time.

Kevin McCormick is a maple producer and past president of the Maple Producers Association of Nova Scotia. (Jack Julian/CBC)

Kevin McCormick, who operates McCormick's Maple,says the warm temperatures may also cause the season this year to beshort. Without "real hard cold" days with consistent temperatures below 0 C, maple trees come out of their dormancy more quickly, and without snow cover, the sun warms the ground, contributing to that effect.

"So everything happens much faster. The trees will just progress very quickly and go from dormancy tobudding,which kind of ends the season," saysMcCormick, who has about 35,000 taps in Rodney, near Springhill.

Damage from Fiona

In addition to producing maple syrup, McCormicksells equipment and supplies toproducers, so he's regularly in contact with others in the industry across the Maritimes.

He says many producers are still grappling with the impact of post-tropical storm Fiona, which slammed the province with winds up to 171 km/h on Sept. 24, 2022.

Trees lay fallen in the woods.
Many trees were downed or damaged by post-tropical storm Fiona. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

Many trees were downed entirely, while otherswere left leaning orwith damaged tops and weakened root systems, makingsome survivors more vulnerable to future storms including lesser storms than Fiona.

"It's taken generations to grow our maple trees and just a few short hours in Fiona have changed our forests for a lifetime and will take many years to get collection systems back to pre-Fiona conditions," he says.

A tube lies on top of a downed tree.
It wasn't just trees that were damaged by Fiona; equipment such as the lines used to collect sap from maple trees were also damaged. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

On his own woodlot, McCormick has found fallen trees with tap holes dating back to the late 1800s.

"We've seen these big old trees thatprobably were seedlingssometime in the mid 1800s. They stood until Fiona.So kind of a sad reality thatMother Nature, you know, the climate's changing."

McCormick says across the province, he expects there will be about 30 per cent fewer trees tapped this year due to damage from Fiona.

'It was a tangled mess'

Jason Haverkort's maple operation in St. Joseph, southwest of Antigonish,was decimated by Fiona, with an estimated 40 to 50 per cent of trees downed, and thousands of others left with broken limbs or tops.

"Everything was down. It was a tangled mess, you know, there was tops of trees were laying on the roots of the ones behind them, so it was quite a mess."

Haverkort was in the midst of tapping on Tuesday and expected to be finished on Wednesday, with the possible launch of sugaring season later this week.

A man stands in the woods with a hard hat and ear protection.
Jason Haverkort cleans up damage in his woodlot from post-tropical storm Fiona. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

He expects his total number of taps to be between 6,000 and 7,000 this year a far cry from the 12,000 trees he was tapping before Fiona.

"I doubt I'll see production and tap numbers as high as they were in my lifetime anymore."