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As we begin welcoming guests for Memorial Day Weekend, we just want to take a moment to assure our friends that we’re open and committed to making every stay at our motel relaxing, remarkable, and safe.

Here at the Colonial Motel, we’ve been taking extra precautions for the health of our guests and staff ever since we learned of COVID-19. For example, we disinfect pens, doorknobs, and other surfaces in our lobby after every use. We strive however to keep the hospitality and picturesque charm we’re known for at the fore of every guest’s experience. No matter if you’re travelling for essential business or pleasure, please rest assured that we’re worrying about COVID-19 so that you don’t have to.

Ready for a truly enjoyable stay in the beautiful Catskills? Please call us at (607) 588-6122 or visit our online booking page to reserve your room. To learn more about New York State’s latest steps towards reopening, please click here.

Oh, maple syrup! You’re arguably the northeastern United States’ best contribution to world cuisine and the perfect soulmate to fluffy pancakes, but how did you get where you are today? Well, it’s an interesting story!

Native Americans were the first to tap maple trees for sap in North America. Different nations have many different legends about who struck upon the brilliant idea – ranging from kings to deities to everyday people to even a squirrel. Seventeenth century Native Americans enjoyed maple products plain and used them as a sweetener and flavoring in recipes. One of our favorites is Iroquois strawberry juice. Mash it all together or for a modern version, just combine strawberries, water, and maple syrup to taste in a blender, blend, and enjoy.

When European colonists started arriving in the Americas, they took to maple sap collecting immediately. However, for them it was more for the delicious maple sugar that could me made from it than for the syrup itself. Pure cane sugar in the colonial era was not easy to come by. The sugar from the British colonies in the Caribbean was expensive and the sugar from French Louisiana was wet, moldy, and miserable. When colonists protested unfair taxation by boycotting British luxury items, they nearly stopped buying Barbadian sugar altogether and the demand for maple sugar experienced a brief boom.

Americans continued to use maple sap primarily for sugar until the 1860s. Around that time the price of cane sugar produced by enslaved workers was so low that maple entrepreneurs decided to try to build an audience for maple syrup. They introduced metal sheet pans to replace inefficient boiling kettles, evaporators to concentrate sap, and other technologies that improved both the price and quality of their product. Their efforts paid off and maple syrup gradually became a beloved breakfast institution.

Nowadays the technology used by major syrup manufacturers is very advanced. They may use everything from vacuum pumps to reverse osmosis machines, but they still need to start with suitable maple trees just like folks did three hundred years ago. Canada makes a whopping 80% of the world’s maple syrup. Vermont makes the most of any state in the U.S., followed by New York. Maple products are also big in Japan, where they’re both produced and enjoyed.

If you’re an avid maple syrup fan like we are, it might surprise you that the majority of American grocery shoppers overwhelmingly prefer “maple-flavored breakfast syrup” to the real deal. Scandalous, isn’t it? But then again, most of the country isn’t fortunate enough to be surrounded by maple trees, maple producers, and traditions celebrating this tasty and quintessentially American treat. Here in the Catskills on the other hand we have lots of options. Tomorrow, for example, Shaver Hill Farm is hosting the second weekend of its 24th Annual Maple Open House just twenty minutes from the Colonial Motel. There will be an all-you-can-eat pancake breakfast, horse-drawn carriage rides, and other family-friendly activities. Hope to see you there!

Ah, the fresh country air! The kids are in the mini van, the mini van’s winding its way into the Catskills, and you’re wondering what to do on a day after a day hitting slopes that won’t have the same sticker shock value as a whole family’s worth of ski lift tickets. Fortunately, Mine Kill State Park offers lots of free family fun activities and is less than ten minutes from the Colonial Motel.

Mine Kill is a local institution. Even though the park is better known for its boating, fishing, Olympic-sized swimming pool, and other warm weather activities, there’s plenty to do in the winter, too. Kids will love the ice skating, snow shoeing, sledding, and tubing. For teens who are more of the serene, contemplative sort, Mine Kill’s many hiking trails – including one overlooking the beautiful Mine Kill Falls – provide plenty of inspiration.

Best of all, Mine Kill’s many kid-friendly activities are free! Ice skates and other equipment can be borrowed for a refundable $5 deposit.

Mine Kill State Park is located in North Blenheim, NY. If you’ll be in the area on March 9th, don’t miss the Winter Wildlife Program. The little ones will have a chance to meet and learn all about local wildlife and do some exciting arts and crafts projects. Please check out the park’s Facebook page (or ask anyone of us here at the Colonial Motel!) to learn more about this and other free family events.

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