Frazz by Jef Mallett for September 25, 2015
Transcript:
Frazz: Nothing says fall like maple syrup. Even though it's harvested in early spring. I guess because maple trees look their mapleiest in the fall more than they taste their mapleiest in the spring or because they only look maple-y now but taste maple-y any time of the year as long as you've got the time to boil the Caulfield: Nothing says "keep it simple" like Frazz. Miss Plainwell: Seriously? Caulfield: Not a bit.
tomielm about 9 years ago
Not tenses — adjectives, two cases.
Richard Howland-Bolton Premium Member about 9 years ago
Night: All the tenses of the verbs seem perfectly normal.
Chrisdiaz801 about 9 years ago
Nice zinger, Caufield. You almost fooled Miss Plainwell.
whiteheron about 9 years ago
He’s at his Frazziest.
googonite about 9 years ago
Just be mindful of those falling leaves.
pschearer Premium Member about 9 years ago
As long as we are talking language, did you know the Brits stopped saying ‘fall’ for autumn a few centuries ago? The Shorter Oxford Dict. shows it as “chiefly N Amer.”
David Hironimus about 9 years ago
And Michigan maple syrup is different from Vermont and Canadian maple syrup. And BETTER! How I miss it now that I live on the west coast….
Pipe Tobacco Premium Member about 9 years ago
So much nicer today! I am so glad it was not another “scared of leaf” comic.
hippogriff about 9 years ago
David HironimusThe sugar maple may be the national emblem, but as you know, is fairly rare in BC. You just can’t tap a vine maple.
Old_Iron_Sides about 9 years ago
You can harvest maple syrup both in the spring and in the fall. In one season much of the sap is flowing up towards the leaves etc and circulating, and in the other it is draining back down towards the roots in preparation for winter.
JP Steve Premium Member about 9 years ago
THat should be “Oh Canad-Eh?” (Not tobe confused with “Hosé can you see?”)
rgcviper about 9 years ago
As I often say …
K.I.S.S. … Keep It Simple, Stupid.
hippogriff about 9 years ago
bigpumaAs pointed out two hours before your question, it is a stylized sugar maple, same as on the flag and aircraft roundel. At one time, the roundel had the actual sugar maple shaped, but that required too complicated stencils to paint.
dscotthep almost 9 years ago
@comicsssfan@StratmanronLast spring my son and I collected 17 gallons of sap from a single tap on a 13" dia. maple tree. We boiled it down to about 1.25 quarts of syrup.
Supplies cost us about $20. Not counting the <5 minutes a day (over 2 months) to collect the sap, we spent about 8-10 hours boiling and filtering the sap into syrup.
This spring we’re tapping 3 trees!