Birch Sapping in Appalachia

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  • Опубліковано 5 вер 2024
  • Come along with us as we go birch sapping in the mountains. We tried two different ways of utilizing the birch tree as a spring tonic treat.
    Here's the Bill Landry video I mentioned: / 10157457950940550
    Here's a post about Sidney Saylor Farr's memories of birch sapping: blindpigandthe... and the name of her book is: More than Moonshine: Appalachian Recipes and Recollections
    Please subscribe to this channel and help me Celebrate Appalachia!
    Drop us a line:
    Celebrating Appalachia
    PO Box 83
    Brasstown, NC 28902
    Visit Blind Pig and The Acorn here: blindpigandtheacorn.com
    Find The Pressley Girls music here: / @thepressleygirls
    Find Blind Pig and the Acorn music here: / @blindpigandtheacorn
    Buy my family's music here: www.etsy.com/s... and here: www.etsy.com/T...
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    #Appalachia #AppalachianMountains #BirchSapping

КОМЕНТАРІ • 501

  • @RHODOAN
    @RHODOAN 3 роки тому +35

    We have a river birch in our front yard and I have watched a squirrel lie on a branch with all four legs hanging down, drinking birch sap from a small spot and then apparently falling asleep on that branch, lying motionless for a long time, all four legs dangling below.

    • @victorbunch7725
      @victorbunch7725 3 роки тому +3

      For those that don't know what a river birch is, It is a tree that looks like it has a dreaded disease w/its bark peeling off in big slabs, lol

    • @judytullos9889
      @judytullos9889 3 роки тому +3

      They do not live long, fifteen to twenty years, they have shallow roots, and brittle, soft wood. The bark peels for a good fire- starter.

    • @13c11a
      @13c11a 2 роки тому +3

      I wish you had taken a picture of that! The same is true of fruit that is not picked and becomes a little fermented on the trees. The birds and bats actually get drunk on the fruit. Hey, no flying while drunk!

  • @ironworker5792
    @ironworker5792 3 роки тому +37

    I see why folks were drawn to those steep hills, peace and quiet, knowing your family is safe. The sound of running water is so peaceful... This is my news channel now. God Bless

  • @MsLighthorse
    @MsLighthorse 3 роки тому +14

    We used to chew on birch twigs as kids. It always reminded me of the flavor of tea berry gum.

    • @deepsleep7822
      @deepsleep7822 3 роки тому

      I used to do something similar when I was a kid. I was fortunate to have access to a very large wooded area. Although I didn't know it was a birch tree, for some reason I took a twig off of it and chewed on it. I was quite surprised at the flavor, as in that it had any flavor, let alone a spearmint flavor. I know I took a few twigs with me as I continued my hike. Chewed on them for a while and then discarded.

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 3 роки тому

      But did you do the teaberry shuffle?

    • @13c11a
      @13c11a 2 роки тому

      ​@@Marcel_Audubon What is the teaberry shuffle?

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 2 роки тому

      @@13c11a
      ua-cam.com/video/jB1UwaccSRI/v-deo.html

  • @rosedwight4861
    @rosedwight4861 3 роки тому +15

    My cousin in Huntington,WV & I just giggled over something I want to share. We realize we had been raised on bacon grease!!! Our Mom& all r Grandmas always poured all the bacon grease into a crock that was kept to the right of the stove. So when something needed a little grease to get started a big spoon full of bacon grease would get dipped out. So green beans, fried potatoes, pork chops started the same. I was 25 years old before I tasted green beans cooked with a bit of olive oil & garlic.

    • @rhondajo3
      @rhondajo3 3 роки тому +2

      In the 70s, I fried everything in bacon grease also. :)

  • @ndnpony
    @ndnpony 3 роки тому +2

    I have been a big fan of yours and your family for quite a while. I usually don't write much on the internet, but I wanted to thank you for being so genuine. Your videos and Fluty Lick Homestead's remind me of my childhood. I'm Native American and was born and raised in Oklahoma. I come from a large family that was very close when I was a child. We'd all go to the woods and dig up wild onions, morels and maybe fish, but Gramps would tap the Birch trees with a spile that he had used as a child. He used to cool his coffee in his saucer. Unfortunately, they have all passed but your videos give me that same 'safe' and 'warm family' feeling I remember having when Gramps would have Sunday Dinner at his home. All the kids would take turns on the ice cream maker handle, Grandma would make apple pie from the tree in the back.
    I got some Greasy Beans from Jared at Fluty Lick. Those are the best tasting pole beans I have ever eaten. And I have eaten my share. On Sundays the kids would also sit around a #10 galvanized tub and snap beans and/or shuck corn saving the shucks for Gramps. He rolled Bull Durham or Prince Albert in the carefully trimmed shucks. When season was right we'd spread corn on screens to dry, help Grandma render lard.
    I have always thought Heaven was like that.
    Thank you for taking me back to the best times in my life. God Bless you, Matt & The Pressley Girls.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  3 роки тому +1

      Thank you so much! It makes me so happy to know we remind you of your family 😀

  • @lorchid23
    @lorchid23 3 роки тому +22

    What a strange coincidence that just today, I was doing a little shopping at a small, local produce market and they had Birch soda pop... I commented to my husband that it was the first time I’d ever seen it, and I’ve lived in the Appalachian mountains (foothills) all my life.
    Thank you so much for providing this knowledge‼️ 🇺🇸❣️God bless❣️

  • @pamelalancaster8642
    @pamelalancaster8642 3 роки тому +2

    Wonderful to try different things! Alas, all we have to make from our trees would be turpentine. Pine trees are prolific in our mountains as are Douglas fir and Larch. The Larch are great for wood stoves. The Larch are beautiful in the fall as their leaves turn bright gold!
    We don’t have the reds you have back there. Lived in Virginia and the fall colors were breathtaking. God gives a glimpse of heaven in the fall.

  • @Lilybet1316
    @Lilybet1316 3 роки тому +27

    Here in Maine we have commercially made birch beer as an alternative to root beer although it’s non-alcoholic. Very refreshing!

  • @lainyrudloff9015
    @lainyrudloff9015 18 днів тому

    The sounds of the dried leaves, birds singing and the running water was like being right there with you.

  • @johnsmalldridge6356
    @johnsmalldridge6356 3 роки тому +15

    You can plug the hole in the tree with clean fresh whittled plug made from a birch branch.

    • @deepsleep7822
      @deepsleep7822 3 роки тому +4

      Yeah, in fact you should or the tree could "bleed" out. At least that's what I was told by some older people.

  • @rsmith6909
    @rsmith6909 3 роки тому +16

    I noticed all the beautiful bird sounds in the background.

  • @independentthinker8930
    @independentthinker8930 3 роки тому +12

    It was sassafras here in Alabama, I remember digging the roots up and "the old folks" would cook it and make rootbeer. It was great for digestive problems. I keep some roots in my pack to this day

  • @dr.froghopper6711
    @dr.froghopper6711 3 роки тому +5

    I studied survival in the military and since then. I’ve read about this and several varieties of wild beverages. I really appreciate you sharing this because watching is better than reading. When I was 14 we spent the summer just outside of Fairbanks, AK, surrounded by birch trees. I wish I had known this back then. We made birch bark Christmas Cards hand painted. I sure would have tried doing this had I known. Thanks so much for sharing this! You have a beautiful family!

  • @elizabethbowen7094
    @elizabethbowen7094 3 роки тому +48

    Thank you for including us as part of your family experiment. We grew up in the northeast, NY and PA and tapped our maple trees right on our paved streets with sidewalks, different, but still a connection with nature. I wonder if you could boil down birch sap and make a syrup as we did with our maple sap... if you keep going you get a sugary candy. This is a lovely connection to extend and brings our American family into a shared reality so far away from the angry, burning cities we're enduring. "It's in the dew of little things that the heart finds it's morning and is refreshed." God bless you.

    • @michaelgardner7124
      @michaelgardner7124 3 роки тому +12

      Yes, you can make syrup with birch and you can also make syrup with the sap from black walnut trees. There are other trees you can use to make syrup.

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  3 роки тому +11

      Would love to try black walnut too!

    • @gregjohnston9287
      @gregjohnston9287 3 роки тому +3

      @@michaelgardner7124 do you handle the Walnut sap like Maple? I’ve noticed when pruning my Walnuts in Late winter that they seem to run sap earlier than other trees.

    • @michaelgardner7124
      @michaelgardner7124 3 роки тому +2

      @@gregjohnston9287 There are a number of video on UA-cam on "How to make black walnut syrup". I hope this helps.

    • @JLamstudio
      @JLamstudio 3 роки тому +4

      Wow, imagine tapping your own maple 🍁 syrup!!! 😋

  • @misscindy3414
    @misscindy3414 3 роки тому +30

    That was pretty kool! "What did you do last weekend." " We went to the woods and drank from a tree." You folks don't get bored much, do you? I love how you all are always studying on things.
    That's my family and I love it!

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  3 роки тому +2

      Thank you Miss Cindy 😀

    • @aliciamott8972
      @aliciamott8972 3 роки тому +1

      Studying ?!?!?!! That’s what GRANNY WOULD SAY if you asked her what she was doing , I’m 65 and she was my great grandmother, I admit, I still love to use that , a BEAUTIFUL SCRIPTURE SAYS MARY PONDERED , same thing , YALL reckon

    • @selenahadlow9700
      @selenahadlow9700 3 роки тому

      Awesome

  • @happymack6605
    @happymack6605 3 роки тому +10

    We tap our birch the same as our sugar maples; place the spile below the largest limbs of the tree. When sugaring off, we have to be extra careful with the birch as it tends to burn quicker than maple. No fixing burnt. Thank you so much for your thoughtful videos 🌸

  • @NickiSixx1
    @NickiSixx1 3 роки тому +8

    Here in Sweden they make juice, cordial and syrup from birch trees. Never done it myself but I’v tasted it and it’s really nice

  • @nj1639
    @nj1639 3 роки тому +14

    Red bird singing "Pretty, pretty, pretty, pretty".

  • @scottblack3381
    @scottblack3381 3 роки тому +6

    This takes me back to my time in Bybee, Tennessee. A mountain backed right up to the house and each spring we would climb up and tap a big ol' birch and get a couple of gallons of the sweet sap. We plugged the hole with a Beech plug and far as I can tell we never hurt the tree and we used the same tree every spring. Thanks for sharing y'all!

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  3 роки тому +3

      Scott-thank you for sharing your experience with tapping birch trees!! We did plug the hole 😀 Nice to know it didn't harm the one you all used!

  • @mishalea
    @mishalea 3 роки тому +6

    That is so awesome!! Growing up in the Appalachian mountains of PA and around Amish and Mennonite country drinking birch beer soda was a commonality! Every time I go home to visit I go to one of my favorite pizza/sub restaurants and get the white birch beer, or at the Amish stores. Certainly blessed!!💖🌸🌼

    • @mishalea
      @mishalea 3 роки тому

      Ordered the book used on Amazon. Cant wait to look thru it!

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  3 роки тому +4

      Oh I know you'll love the book!

  • @roddmatsui3554
    @roddmatsui3554 3 роки тому +5

    The stereo ambient sound alone is incredible; worth the price of admission.

  • @buddyharris5515
    @buddyharris5515 3 роки тому +13

    The birch sap tastes like water because that's what most of it is. To make maple syrup from maple sap, it takes 40 gallons of sap to make 1 gallon of syrup. I'm sure it would be about the same for birch.

    • @scooterdogg7580
      @scooterdogg7580 3 роки тому +4

      takes much more birch sap it contains less sugar

    • @jedidiah5131
      @jedidiah5131 3 роки тому +3

      Its 100/1 for Birch. Its just not worth the effort but something many people will try to make once.

    • @deepsleep7822
      @deepsleep7822 3 роки тому +3

      @BH: that's what I was thinking. Maybe process it like Maple syrup is processed.

  • @bsteele5287
    @bsteele5287 3 роки тому +4

    What a beautiful place. You are lucky to live there. Your family seems so content and at peace with life. Thanks for sharing.

  • @StevePdue
    @StevePdue 3 роки тому +3

    I was amazed the first time I chewed on birch bark. I thought it was wintergreen flavored. We called it Cherry Birch. From the western mountains of Va. Love your Channel! Thanks.

  • @naomitracy5684
    @naomitracy5684 3 роки тому +5

    looks like a fun experiment and Matt provided more proof of my theory on the genius of Appalachian people . Most people would see the rain and call that a failed experiment . the Appalachian genius kicked in and he made a rain cover for the birch tree syrup. Outstanding!! 😁💥💯👍

  • @waydwnbama-way3089
    @waydwnbama-way3089 3 роки тому +9

    Funny my Dad was talking about this the other day, they chewed the inner bark for a treat.

  • @forestgreenman
    @forestgreenman 3 роки тому +1

    I've heard of people making syrup from birch sap but I don't know anyone that does. Here in Central Wisconsin it's all about the maple syrup in the early spring. We had a short season this year so I imagine prices are going to go up if you don't make your own. I know a number of people that tap the maples in their yard so they can make enough for themselves for the year. I also know many people with woodlands that features a lot of maple who cook syrup and sell to a wholesaler for a little added cash. My brother-in-law did sapping for a number of years and that was always great fun as it was a signal that winter's grip had been broken and the warm weather was soon to be returning. He has since stopped cooking and know sells the sap to a mutual friend of ours, who is wheel chair bound, and he cooks and sells to wholesale to supplement his income.
    Another great video!
    Thanks!

  • @AnotherWittyUsername.
    @AnotherWittyUsername. 3 роки тому +2

    We make birch syrup from birch sap. It's not as sweet as maple syrup, but still very tasty on pancakes. We don't have sugar maples where I live in Western Canada, but you can make syrup from the sap of any maple tree with varying degrees of sweetness. We just take what the forest gives us and are thankful for it.

  • @michael7423
    @michael7423 2 роки тому +1

    i remember my mamma talking about birch beer long ago, I never knew what she was referring to but i think this video explains it! i'm glad to see Corrie again!!

  • @tomgriffiths68
    @tomgriffiths68 3 роки тому +7

    I've never done any birch sapping but I've made a lot of sassafras tea when I was a kid.

  • @Lisa-cj6vx
    @Lisa-cj6vx 3 роки тому +7

    My friend and I were just talking about birch sapping in the Catskill Mountains in NY! Her family has a maple sapping operation there but there are others that tap birch trees!! Thanks for sharing!! I enjoy your videos!!♡

  • @larrycounce4509
    @larrycounce4509 3 роки тому +8

    Birch bark makes a nice fly rod handle also is rot resident, good stuff. Makes tasty smoked chicken. Interesting it makes a drink , think look into this, thanks. I forgot its makes a good fire starter.

    • @larrycounce4509
      @larrycounce4509 3 роки тому

      Beware of the tanic acid in the bark.

    • @marikafranke5046
      @marikafranke5046 3 роки тому +2

      Depending where you live timing for collecting the sap differs. You have to do it around time when still snow on the ground. I know where I live there is no snow at all, I do it in early February (TN). Birch sap is supposed to ferment. Add sugar to taste, and one of your choice raisins, little branch of black currant or crast or black rye bread. And let it sit for couple of weeks in cool place. It becomes a best beverage of hot summer, carbonated. My Great Grandparents had a barrel of it in root cellar for every summer. One barrel of fermented birch sap and one barrel of souerkraut. Now I am a great grandmom.

  • @jeffpruitt963
    @jeffpruitt963 3 роки тому +10

    I like this idea. I tried birch syrup more than once in Alaska..but my heart goes back to Maple Syrup. Great adventure video!

  • @Prepping_mimi
    @Prepping_mimi 3 роки тому +1

    This makes sense. Gramma always made “birch beer” (soda). Of course no carbonation. I never knew how and I bet this was what she did. Loved it as a kid. We weren’t allowed to have soda growing up so it was always a treat for us.

  • @christopherbeckerdite4273
    @christopherbeckerdite4273 2 роки тому +1

    I remember a restaurant i went to as a child and would order Birch beer. Which is similar to Root beer. So when you ordered it they'd bring you a small birch twig so you could chew the bark.

  • @phillipgreene2564
    @phillipgreene2564 3 роки тому

    Way back I used to hide under the tall bed in the back room that smelled like an antique shop; I'd squeeze in-between old wooden fruit crates that were used to keep old canning jars. Every one of em had lids just like the lid on your sap jar. Crazy...how that lid was able to dust off them ol' memories. The more I watch your videos the more they just open me right.

  • @bigjake55555
    @bigjake55555 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for sharing this. It reminds me of my family from Tennessee.

  • @rickcooper6817
    @rickcooper6817 3 роки тому +1

    When I was a little feller I would go cut birch twigs for Granny to use as snuff brushes. I would chew on me one on the way back to the house. More good memories. Thanks y'all!

    • @clarencegreen3071
      @clarencegreen3071 3 роки тому +1

      One of my earliest memories is that the ladies of the holler would use birch twigs as snuff brushes. Chew one end until it makes a brush, then stick the brush into the snuff box to load it up. I thought that process was "very interesting."

  • @karenhayek8901
    @karenhayek8901 3 роки тому +43

    If someone was stranded in the woods, and knew what a Birch tree looked like,they could have water!!

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  3 роки тому +10

      Karen-birch is listed as a survival food on some sites 😀 Thank you for watching!

    • @terryfinley7760
      @terryfinley7760 3 роки тому +10

      It is a source of clean drinking water. No filtering or purification needed.

    • @aliciamott8972
      @aliciamott8972 3 роки тому +4

      Y’all’s land is very beautiful!!!!!! So here in north mississippi we call them RIVER BIRCHES , same thing right ? They like water , beautiful bark , split trunks ?

    • @aliciamott8972
      @aliciamott8972 3 роки тому +3

      This should be in the scout handbook , about surviving

    • @oldgoat1890
      @oldgoat1890 3 роки тому +1

      @@aliciamott8972 Hard to say. Local terms are sometimes different for trees. Around here river birch is not the same.

  • @bigfootrealencounters1882
    @bigfootrealencounters1882 3 роки тому +2

    Black Birch contains Methyl salicylate which is also found in the wintergreen plant and is responsible for the unique minty flavor.

  • @keeptrying5962
    @keeptrying5962 3 роки тому +4

    I like how this (at least) gives us inspiration to think about how different life was so long (or not so long, in grand scope) ago. The small things we take for granted, almost can't fully appreciate. Thanks for another interesting video!

  • @leighflorkevich9916
    @leighflorkevich9916 3 роки тому

    The woods and mountains are so soothing.

  • @retroblue4748
    @retroblue4748 3 роки тому +1

    Watching your videos has lowered my blood Pressure 😂. Thank you 🙏 for your videos

  • @n8vmc469
    @n8vmc469 2 роки тому +1

    Had Birch shine! Made in Maggie Valley NC. My son found it in a log while Bear hunting.

  • @ShawnPlusOne
    @ShawnPlusOne 3 роки тому +3

    This video is so calming and those woods are beautiful the Birch trees omg I can just imagine what they smell like I also love the sounds those birds make they are so melodic and I like the sounds as you all crunch the leaves when you walk on the ground.

  • @billiefloyd7106
    @billiefloyd7106 3 роки тому +2

    I seen a video from Canada where they boiled the sap down and made syrup, like you do with maple sap.

  • @janicehanson3263
    @janicehanson3263 3 роки тому +1

    All I can say is WOW.

  • @0Hillbilly
    @0Hillbilly 3 роки тому +1

    I'm enjoying your videos, this one reminds of some of Townsends videos. If you're not familiar with Townsends they do 18 century cooking, drinks, and life. They have several drinks like this. Nice seeing all the Rhododendron.

  • @tiatamara11
    @tiatamara11 2 роки тому

    There's gold in them thar hills. Appalachia has fine resources to go with the people. Blessings family. This is so much fun. The camera work is unequalled...great angles etc. Thank you family ...you really are the epitome of what the legendary appalachians are to us here in Australia NZ...our cuzzies from Gt Britain and we love it. I'm sharing these with everyone I know and they are blown away....some of the comments are "They even look like us" haha. Good stuff.

  • @KarenInTx
    @KarenInTx 3 роки тому +2

    Watched this again. And yes, you can buy bottles of Birchbeer (non alcoholic) just like you can Gingerbeer and Rootbeer, But to make your own would be so interesting and for kids a treat. Yall are so much fun to watch. God Bless

  • @kathycox7392
    @kathycox7392 3 роки тому +7

    I enjoyed this video, my family never did this that I know of. The cadence of your voice sounds like home to me. 👍

  • @suecastillo4056
    @suecastillo4056 3 роки тому +2

    Never heard of birch syrup! See? I’m learning so much being a subscriber to my Appalachian roots!! SO grateful!! Thank you from my heart♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️🙋‍♀️🙏🏻❣️

  • @naturesmagik
    @naturesmagik 2 роки тому

    17:05, it`s so clear and beautiful looking! Wow!

  • @tracyguitard7113
    @tracyguitard7113 3 роки тому +1

    The sap needs to be boiled down to get the sweetness, its like maple sap tastes like nothing really till we boil it down into syrup, it takes about 4 gallons of sap to make a gallon of syrup , I found your channel by accident and am so glad I did, my husband is from the Canadian Appalachian mountains

    • @CelebratingAppalachia
      @CelebratingAppalachia  3 роки тому +1

      Thanks for watching-and for the info!! Hope you drop back by often 😀

  • @pamelamusante5343
    @pamelamusante5343 2 роки тому

    Hi Tipper. I grew up with Pennsylvania Dutch Birch Beer Soda. You still can buy it in certain places. It's very unique taste. Like root beer, just very unique. I still get it here in Indiana. I love your videos, and family. TY for all your work. Beautiful Place. God Bless 💯

  • @Scotchvalley7777
    @Scotchvalley7777 3 роки тому +24

    My Dad would dig up sassafras roots and make us drink the water

    • @CraigerAce
      @CraigerAce 3 роки тому +5

      My grandma Georgia made sassafras tea. I liked it.

    • @oldgoat1890
      @oldgoat1890 3 роки тому +2

      @@CraigerAce I still make the tea, but buy the extract now.

    • @jasonbone5121
      @jasonbone5121 3 роки тому +1

      We did that when I was. a kid as well. Boiled the roots and make tea.

    • @richardschmitt9479
      @richardschmitt9479 3 роки тому +2

      Sassafras is considered a carcinogenic. Just saying.

    • @sstills951
      @sstills951 3 роки тому +1

      @@richardschmitt9479 Yeah I stopped making sassafras tea once I heard that. The extract that you purchase doesn't have the carcinogen in it but its kind of expensive.

  • @ingunafismeistere5264
    @ingunafismeistere5264 2 роки тому

    I am from Latvia, Northen Europe. Scandinavian, Baltic and Slavi people are collecting birch sap in spring. Tastes like a little bit sweetened water when fresh. Has diuretic and clensing function. But you can ad raisins, lemon juice, black current twigs, bit of suggar or nothing at all and let ferment in warm room for about 4-5 days. Taste in between and see witch ingredients and wich stage of fermenting you like better. At the end it becomes fizzy. Then you can put the drink in bottles and store the variety you like in cellar till summer. I have 8 birches tapped for a family of 5 this year.
    People make soft drinks, beer, vine, and syrup from it too.
    Must close the hole you made in the tree with a twig, so that the tree doesn't lose sap, and it is easier for the tree to heal.

  • @dustyblackbird6811
    @dustyblackbird6811 2 роки тому

    I live in south dakota and the black hills are steep like that also ... a great cardio workout when you go hiking. So beautiful there where you are

  • @UnKnown-zy1km
    @UnKnown-zy1km 3 роки тому

    I live in east Tennessee Gatlinburg area. I have never heads of birch sap or tapping the birch trees. I have lots of birch trees around more house So I will be trying this...
    I enjoyed this video Thank you...

  • @KatInTheNorth
    @KatInTheNorth 3 роки тому +5

    Wow! You’ve got quite a bit of liquid from the Birches. We have a lot of Birch here but ours are not as big as yours. Thanks for sharing.

  • @mybuttitches6450
    @mybuttitches6450 2 роки тому

    Always, been a sap sucker, for new tree drinks. Will try this ASAP! Matt, your drill performance, riveting!

  • @montimitchellsr
    @montimitchellsr 3 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing your life and family with us

  • @grannianni6229
    @grannianni6229 3 роки тому +1

    Just stopped by to say Howdy, coming atcha from good ole East TN. That's just how we roll! Blessings

  • @robinhaupt9119
    @robinhaupt9119 3 роки тому +1

    This was so interesting! Thank you. All I want to do is come live in Appalachia.

  • @RevDenyse
    @RevDenyse Рік тому

    Birch beer... Childhood favorite. It is still bottled and sold.

  • @rlsingle00
    @rlsingle00 3 роки тому +1

    Birch trees tastes like wintergreen. My dad would cut twigs for us to chew on. However Spring always reminds me of digging sassafras roots to make tea. We also made maple syrup in the spring, as soon as the sap starts to flow. Can’t for get about ramps, we are digging them now. They are a required taste, you either like them or you hate them.

  • @charleswilliams9647
    @charleswilliams9647 Рік тому

    I have done some research on this. from what I have read I have learned that the best time to tap trees for their sap is in the early spring when the temperature drops below freezing at night but warms above that during the day. that's when the tree sap flows the most. A small hole with a tap is best. the way you drilled them is good. you should make a cork from the same wood to plug the hole when you are done. and if you are in an area where water is needed and hard to come by any tree can be a source of water that is drinkable.

  • @graceandglory1948
    @graceandglory1948 2 роки тому

    This was very interesting. If I could do this, I surely would. Walking is very difficult now. Thanks for sharing. Looked like a fun family day.

  • @clarencegreen3071
    @clarencegreen3071 3 роки тому +1

    I recognize the ole-timey one piece lid for the jar. Haven't seen one in many years. Remember playing with the rubber seals as a kid.

  • @buzsalmon
    @buzsalmon 3 роки тому +3

    I've heard of it but ya'll have done something I never have. Very nice to see all three of you together today learning more and teaching us more about birch trees.

  • @naturesmagik
    @naturesmagik 2 роки тому +1

    Birch sap is commonly known for its detoxifying, diuretic, cleansing, and purifying properties, and can be drunk fresh straight out of the tree. Cartographer Olaus Magnus mentioned briefly in 1555 that Scandinavians were tapping birch for sap and using it as a fresh drink. The taste is actually not bad.

  • @jaenmartens5697
    @jaenmartens5697 3 роки тому

    Simpson Springs In Maine made birch beer and it was my absolute favorite soda ever ❤️👍

  • @ratroddiesels1981
    @ratroddiesels1981 3 роки тому +2

    we liken it to wintergreen , also rootbeer , and even pepsodent toothpaste . thank you maam and god bless .

  • @everycoLor_312
    @everycoLor_312 3 роки тому +2

    My new favorite channel. Thankyou, I adore everything about this!☺❤

  • @christierella
    @christierella 2 роки тому +1

    I’d love a knot tying series...please! 😬

  • @jeffstrong4311
    @jeffstrong4311 3 роки тому +1

    So where I live in southern Oregon on the coast there weren't any Birch trees. Of any kind. I like the weeping birch best. So I had to drive to a nursery on the other side of the state and bought about a 1/2 dozen of each. (So using Appalachian terms, I went and bought me Mess of Birch Trees lol) Now I started my own forest of birch trees. Maybe in another year they'll be big enough to get some birch juice out of them.

  • @rickskeweris8031
    @rickskeweris8031 3 роки тому

    As kids we would scrape the pulp, mix with sugar and chew it. We called it our birch chewing tobacco. Still love the flavor of birch and buy birch beer in the grocery store.

  • @charliepc56
    @charliepc56 3 роки тому

    Birch Sap is great for flavoring moonshine. My grandfather and uncles made Birch Moonshine, and I'm sure some folks do that today..

  • @OldWaysGardeningandPrepping
    @OldWaysGardeningandPrepping 3 роки тому +1

    Have always wanted to go birch sapping. Have not tried the birch sap, but have had a birch beer. It is a wonderful drink. Thank you for taking us along on another adventure. Looking forward to the next video already. 🍀

  • @justinehyre2975
    @justinehyre2975 Рік тому

    Our favorite drinks as kids when we went to NY to visit my Dad's family was to get Creme soda, sarsaparilla and birch beer soda!!
    Living WV we could occasionally find creme soda and sarsaparilla but never could find birch beer soda. At 74 they are still my favorites although still hard to find sarsaparilla and birch beer. When I visit eastern PA near NY I always stock up on all three!!
    One thing I did grow up on is sassafras tea!! Loved it and still do. It is supposedly a carcinogen but I am 74 and still here.
    My grandparents used it as 'a spring tonic to thin the blood from winter!!!
    We live in Davie County NC now. I wonder if there are birch trees here. I would love to do it!!

  • @KyDove8
    @KyDove8 Рік тому

    Love the experience. Also love the light above your sink. 😊

  • @donnaelkins186
    @donnaelkins186 2 роки тому

    Very interesting. Never have heard of this sapping . Thank you for sharing .. God bless.

  • @dianatennant4346
    @dianatennant4346 3 роки тому +2

    This was very interesting thank you

  • @globalcolor4080
    @globalcolor4080 2 роки тому

    Luved this video and so many of your other vids too. Now I'm going to have to do a search of your other vids I want to watch! I live in the Blue Ridge Mountains now, but grew up on L.I. I can tell my experience with Birch, which is a bit different. First, I knew what the soda was. Birch soda was not something we had in our house, but I did try the soda a couple of times as a kid, it was an exotic soft drink we maybe got while on vacation. Tasted like Root Beer! That's what we thought at the time. Then, when I was a teenager and started camping/hiking upstate NY, NJ, there were always birch trees, lovely smell and taste. Love seeing them here!

  • @leonardwells9613
    @leonardwells9613 3 роки тому +2

    If the sap tastes like “water” perhaps it would be good to reduce it to concentrate the flavor a bit more. GREAT video, I sorely miss the sassafras tea my father used to make. Thanks for this video. L 👍👍

  • @michaelsnow5229
    @michaelsnow5229 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you Tipper for the Birch sap water video. Moving to East Tennessee soon and will go and locate a birch tree and try some tonic water. In the woods were I currently live I would locate Sassafrass plants and make a root beer like tonic water from the roots.

  • @eugenefried5609
    @eugenefried5609 2 роки тому

    FUN to watch & instructional !!!

  • @annmariesands3270
    @annmariesands3270 3 роки тому +1

    I enjoy birch beer (non-alcoholic) when I find it in a store.

  • @jeffclark4623
    @jeffclark4623 3 роки тому

    Birch stills to distill wintergreen oil were popular in my area of the country. The PA lumber museum has a birch still that they demonstrate with from time to time.

    • @jeffclark4623
      @jeffclark4623 3 роки тому +1

      @JoAnne Brown I’ve never been to NC, but my grandmother was from your state. One of these days I will get there!

  • @carolchurch3727
    @carolchurch3727 2 роки тому

    gives a whole new literally meaning to go eat bark.This is also something I didn't know. pretty cool. I don't think it will hurt it just to do that.

  • @guyfuller1369
    @guyfuller1369 3 роки тому +2

    Wonderful video! Maple trees, as you mentioned, produce amazing sap, syrup, and sugar, but here on the Canadian prairies, it’s too cold for sugar maples; there is, however, a small industry in birch sap harvesting. The “birch water” needs to be boiled and boiled, but eventually birch syrup will result, much milder than maple, but quite lovely on waffles. Brand new subscriber who loves your content.

  • @KyDove8
    @KyDove8 Рік тому

    Birch pitch
    Birch pitch (also called tar), a glue-like substance made by heating birch bark, has been used to fasten stone blades to handles in Europe since at least the Middle Pleistocene (approximately 750,000 to 125,000 years ago).Dec 17, 2019

  • @richardmatlick8445
    @richardmatlick8445 2 роки тому

    We chewed birch inner bark like gum and made birch tea as well. This was back in West Va.

  • @halfwayfarmsandoutdoors3550
    @halfwayfarmsandoutdoors3550 3 роки тому +1

    Years ago when my dad and I would go grouse hunting, he showed me this tree and we would break off some small limbs and chew on them while we hunted. Tastes great!!!!

  • @Teresia12
    @Teresia12 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you so much for this. Mama never made us butch drink but talked about going up the mountain to where the trees were largest and cutting a square of bitch and scraping it and letting it sit for a day in water and adding a little sweetener and said then they would put the lid on and sink it in the icy cold spring for a day and after that as they worked and played they'd go drink a little. I always thought it sounded so good. Kind like Mama's mint tea. My family never went out to eat and only Mama went to the store. My family and all Mama's 12 siblings always made tea with fresh mint leaves in it. I was shocked the first time I ate at a restaurant on a date and there was no mint in the tea. My date found it strange that I thought mint should be in it.

  • @kennygentry1151
    @kennygentry1151 3 роки тому

    I really like this video. I remember my grandaddy talking about making birch oil and making homemade chewing tobacco. And I'm 62 years old. Thanks. I really appreciate and enjoyed this .

  • @colinratford416
    @colinratford416 3 роки тому

    Loved this posting thank you

  • @robinkline5600
    @robinkline5600 3 роки тому

    We have a apple mint patch and make brewed mint tea to drink iced all summer. Lol, my kids grew up on mint tea. I've heard of old timers around here making their own birch beer. Well, I am a old timer...seventy years old, but I mean the old timers before me. :-)

  • @wandainlouisville6398
    @wandainlouisville6398 3 роки тому +1

    The first time I have ever heard of birch sapping. How interesting!

  • @gradymizell494
    @gradymizell494 3 роки тому

    Thank You for sharing.