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Amid pandemic, historic Indiana grain mill saw record year

Local parks are helping you to tap your own maple trees and make syrup

Last week’s freeze-thaw cycles meant that maple sap started to run. Below, we provide several ways that local parks will help you tap your own trees and make syrup. Did you know that you can make a spile (the little device that drains the sap) from a staghorn sumac branch? Or buy one locally for a buck? The popular Sugar Camp Days at Bendix Woods County Park in New Carlisle isn’t happening this year, as officials say the pandemic didn’t allow the months of planning that it needed. But we ll share some of the limited events and tours that are going on in the area in next week s Outdoor Adventures column in The Tribune.

Swiss Valley in Jones stoked to ski later into season with ample snow

A few red-winged blackbirds and a flock or two of sandhill cranes arrived over the weekend. Maple sap was running. Like usual for the start of March. But it still isn’t a usual winter for ski resorts. If it were, the downhill season at Swiss Valley Ski & Snowboard Area in Jones would toast its finale this Sunday — typically a week into March. Instead, spokesman Mike Panich says the resort has booked its “Slush Cup” contest (a sort of farewell party) for March 14 with the option of staying open even longer if the weather permits and visitors keep coming. Snowmelt or not, the resort recently looked more like it was ramping up operations, not chilling out, stoked by the momentum from a super-busy season when weekend ski rentals often ran out. Jamie Stafne, who oversees operations, says this season’s attendance will surely “blow the record for the past two decades.”

5-minute bird counts to track climate change And the latest on great Michiana skiing

Ready for a winter scavenger hunt? This one combines the brief focus of speed dating with the patience of bird-watching. You adopt a 6-mile square. On one morning, select and visit 12 spots within that square, typically the habitat of a given bird. Spend no more than 5 minutes at each spot and look or listen for only the specific birds on your list. There are just a handful, and they’re common enough that you don’t need to be an expert to identify them: a white- or red-breasted nuthatch, Eastern bluebird, American goldfinch or Eastern towhee. Then report your findings. The data will feed into the national Audubon Society’s Climate Watch program, aimed at tracking how birds may be shifting their territories based on regional changes in weather and, as a result, habitat.

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