It was only a trickle.
But for Kaylie Judge and her mother, who roamed the grounds of the Carpenter St. Croix Valley Nature Center last Sunday to see how maple syrup is made, the clear liquid dripping from a tree into a large metal bucket was confirmation that they had hit the sap jackpot.
"It tastes like, kind of sour," the 9-year-old from Hastings said after she placed her fingers beneath the spout to catch a drop and put it to her lips.
Kaylie and her mother, Tammy Judge, were among the 50 or so kids and adults who participated in a two-hour program organized by the nature center to show newcomers and experts how to tap maple trees for the "sour" and watery substance also known as sap.
Every March, several naturalists at the center demonstrate the arduous process of gathering sap and boiling it down to make the sweet delicacy poured over pancakes and waffles.
"It's kind of a ritual of spring, when the snow starts melting and it starts warming up you want to go out there and see if those trees are running," said program director Mayme Johnson, who's been leading the class for more than 28 years.
The center is tucked away in south Washington County, north of Hastings, on more than 700 acres of land. Its naturalists have been tapping the same trees for more than 30 years, Johnson said.
Sunday's program started with a crash course in sap gathering, which Johnson said American Indians started hundreds of years ago, before European settlers arrived in North America.