Bird-Friendly Maple in Connecticut
Through the Bird-Friendly Maple program, 约炮视频 supports producers who are committed to managing their sugarbush (a forest stand from which sap is harvested to produce maple syrup) in ways that benefit nesting and migratory birds.
The majority of Eastern forest-dependent birds 鈥 whose populations have dropped by in the last 50 years - inhabit privately owned land. This is where we scale our impact.
Maple producers voluntarily enroll in our program, and when they agree to implementing practices to improve habitat for birds as well as overall forest health, they earn 约炮视频鈥檚 public recognition.
Maple products come from forests managed in very different ways. By purchasing bird-friendly maple syrup, you are supporting producers who are committed to managing their forests in ways that benefit an incredible variety of nesting songbirds, including Scarlet Tanagers, Wood Thrushes, and Veeries.
Look for the Maple Managed for Birds label the next time you buy maple syrup! If you really want the perfect breakfast, sip on some Bird-Friendly Coffee too!
Producers managing their sugarbush for birds
Centennial Watershed State Forest
Monroe, CT
Contact: deep.stateparks@ct.gov
Read more about the State Forest
Flanders Nature Center & Land Trust
Woodbury, CT
Contact: Vincent D. LaFontan, vince@flandersnaturecenter.org, 203-263-3711
Forest Mill Farm LLC
Coventry, CT
Contacts: Brian Murray and Kelley Barber, info@forestmillfarm.com
Great Mountain Forest
Norfolk, CT
Contact: info@greatmountainforest.org
Hilltop Farm
Redding, CT
Contact: Michelle Sandone, hilltop.farm.redding@gmail.com
Instagram:
Mount Archer Woods | Town of Lyme (tapped by Fat Stone Farm)
Lyme, CT
Contact: Wendolyn Hill, openspace@townlyme.org
Sharon 约炮视频 Center
Sharon, CT
Contact: Eileen Fielding, eileen.fielding@audubon.org
Shelton Land Trust | Nicholdale Farm
Shelton, CT
Contact: Info@sheltonlandtrust.org
Upper Paugussett State Forest
Newtown, CT
Contact: deep.stateparks@ct.gov
See a map of the Upper Block where the sugarbush is
The Wenzel Sugarhouse
Hebron, CT
Contact: Ron Wenzel, rlwenzel@snet.net
Once the nights become warmer in late March and the maple tapping season ends, nesting birds start to move in to our forests. But these birds need more than just maple trees to thrive.
Through Bird-Friendly Maple, we partner with maple producers to return sugarbushes to a more natural state.
The shift will benefit nesting songbirds, including Scarlet Tanagers, Wood Thrushes, Black-throated Blue Warblers, and Veeries鈥攁nd make the resulting product more appealing to bird-loving consumers.
WHAT IS A BIRD-FRIENDLY SUGARBUSH?
Through applied forest management, bird friendly maple producers strive to improve habitat quality in their sugarbushes to optimize breeding and foraging opportunities for forest birds in decline. A bird-friendly sugarbush is managed for the following features to not only provide great habitat for forest birds, but also improve the health of the sugarbush:
- A diversity of tree species and age classes; more than just mature sugar maple
- Complex structural diversity: layers of vegetation; from small seedlings on the forest floor, to saplings and shrubs, to the canopy overhead
- Standing dead trees and live trees with cavities; the bigger the better
- Large logs and branches on the forest floor
A DELICIOUS CONSERVATION PROJECT
Bird-Friendly Maple is a collaborative effort to integrate bird conservation with Connecticut's maple syrup industry by:
- Promoting sugarbush management practices that support birds, forest health, and sustainable sap production
- Publicly recognizing maple producers for considering bird habitat in their sugarbush
- Increasing awareness of the important role Connecticut's forests play in bird conservation
- Educating consumers about maple syrup and its many natural benefits.

Rosa Goldman
Senior Associate, Forest Program, covering Connecticut and New York's Hudson Valley

Claire Mann
Senior Associate, Forest Program, covering New York
Seek Out The Scarlet Tanager!
Consumers with an appetite for conservation should look for maple syrup containers with the Scarlet Tanager 鈥渟eal of approval鈥 indicating that the syrup comes from a sugarbush that is intentionally managed for birds and biodiversity.
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