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Warren on sugaring

Originally published in 1885.
...the month of February, when the bands again separated, and moved back slowly to their respective village sites, to busy themselves with the manufacture of sugar, amidst the thick groves of the valuable maple which was to be found skirting the lakes of which they had taken possession. As a general fact the women only occupied themselves in the sugar bushes, while the men scattered about in small bands, to hunt...
from
William Warren, History of the Ojibway People (St. Paul: Minnesota HIstorical Society, 1984), 263-264.