KEY POINTS
  • The end of winter is normally prime tree-tapping time for New York maple farmers. But for Dana Putnam, a fourth-generation maple farmer, last week was already too hot for the trees to properly freeze, thaw and produce sap.
  • In New York this winter, there's been no snow or frost on the ground as climate change accelerates. Hotter winters have made it harder for farmers to pull sap from the trees and threaten to end the production season early.
  • "I think about climate change and whether or not this maple business will be viable in a decade — it might not be," Putnam said. 
Farmer Dana Putnam tries to tap a maple tree for sap, but is unsuccessful. His trees are producing less sap as the climate changes.

ORANGE COUNTY, NY — Dana Putnam drilled into a maple tree, added a plastic tube and waited for the sap to flow.

Nothing happened.