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      MAPLE MADNESS:
      PROGRAMMING & PROMOTION AT
       THE UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT


  !
  !
  !
  !

Elizabeth Berman
Selene Colburn
Prudence Doherty
Robin Katz
!




!
                                                           !
!

!
    NEEDS ASSESSMENT

          !
!

    !!!                                    Vermont is the top-ranked state in production of maple syrup, having
                                           produced 890,000 gallons of maple syrup in 2010, approximately 45% of
    !                                      the total U.S. production and distribution. The state boasts nearly 2,000
                                           maple producers – from large manufacturing operations like Dakin Farms
                                           to artisan operations like Dragonfly Sugarworks to backyard hobby
                                           producers. The Vermont Maple Sugar Makers’ Association, founded in
                                           1892, is the oldest known agricultural organization in the country. The
                                           central role maple plays in the life of Vermonters is evident by the
                                           numerous ways it is celebrated throughout the state, including the
                                           Vermont Maple Festival, Sugar-on-Snow parties, and the annual Maple
                                           Open House Weekends.

As a land grant university, the University of Vermont has a well-established legacy of agricultural research. Basic
and applied maple research began in the early 1890s and continues today at UVM’s Proctor Maple Research Center,
the first permanent maple research facility in the country. The University Archives contains over 120 linear feet of
unique maple materials, dating from the 1890s to the present and including faculty research papers, photographs,
and samples of sugaring equipment. The UVM Libraries’ Department of Special Collections holds a large collection of
published monographs on maple research from organizations through the state, dating from the late nineteenth
century to the present, as well as eleven interviews on maple sugaring and maple history in its oral history
collection.

With access to a wealth of information, both within the libraries and more broadly across the institution, the UVM
Libraries was well positioned to be a go-to resource for maple information. In 2007, the University of Vermont
Libraries became an institutional member of the Agriculture Network Information Center (AgNIC), and in 2008
applied for and received a grant to create a Maple Research Website.

The resulting website (http://library.uvm.edu/maple) is a comprehensive subject guide in the field of maple syrup,
pulling together maple resources from institutions across the state. Additionally, the site provides access to the
history of maple syrup in Vermont in the form of digitized historic photographs, agricultural extension research
bulletins, and maple recipes, created in collaboration with the UVM Libraries’ Center for Digital Initiatives (CDI).

The information presented on the Maple Research Website meets the needs of a broad audience, including:
     •researchers and students, who have access to an extensive maple syrup bibliography and digital primary
        resources related to maple production
     •maple producers, who benefit by obtaining current applied research on maple collection and production from a
        single source
     •the general public, who benefit from carefully selected content with valid, up-to-date information, including
        health and nutrition information and the community maple cookbook.

The Maple Research Website went live in March of 2010. A team of library
faculty created and implemented an aggressive and innovative promotional
strategy to enhance discoverability of the website and related physical
collections in Special Collections and the University Archives. We promoted
the website to the campus and local communities because the resource was
created for potential heavy users both internal and external to UVM.

Our goal was to make rich and underutilized library resources more
discoverable by showcasing the University of Vermont as a leader in maple
research, assisting researchers and students in meeting their information
needs, and marketing the UVM Libraries as an accessible resource to the
community, especially the vibrant local food community.

Team members included Elizabeth Berman, Science Librarian and Project
Manager for the Maple Research Website; Selene Colburn, Assistant to the
Dean of Libraries for External Relations; Prudence Doherty, Special
Collections Outreach Librarian; and Robin Katz, Digital Initiatives Outreach
Librarian.
!




       !
                                                                     !
 MAPLE RESEARCH WEBSITE
       !

       !



  !
       !
The Maple Research Website was created in partnership with the Agriculture Network Information Center (AgNIC), with
  !!! !!
support from the National Agricultural Library. The website is a comprehensive subject guide in the field of maple, meeting the
information needs of a broad audience, including researchers, students, maple producers, historians, and community members.
  !
Information on the website includes:

   •       A history of maple sugaring from the 16th century through present, including a comprehensive timeline and common
           terminology;
   •       A primer on maple collection and production, including links to maple Extension facilities, trade associations, and
           equipment manufacturers;
   •       A section on nutrition and recipes, including information about maple syrup grades, the nutritional value of maple syrup,
           and a community maple cookbook, populated by recipes submitted by local chefs, restaurants, and community members;
   •       A comprehensive bibliography of maple-related literature, including national and international maple statistics;
   •       A digital collection of maple materials, including the University of Vermont’s maple extension bulletins and historical
           photos of the Proctor Maple Research Center, created in collaboration with UVM’s Center for Digital Initiatives; and
   •       An AskMaple reference service.
!




          !
                         !
MAPLE RESEARCH WEBSITE
          !

          !



      !
          !

!!!                                        !!


!




                             COMMUNITY MAPLE COOKBOOK
                             The Community Maple Cookbook is a virtual
                             collection of maple recipes submitted by
                             community members; all recipes from the Maple
                             Cook-Off are in the cookbook. The cookbook is
                             managed using Wordpress blogging software,
                             which allows for features such as categories and
                             tagging.


                             ASK MAPLE
                             AskMaple is a free maple reference service
                             offered by the UVM Libraries, in collaboration
                             with maple syrup researchers, educators,
                             producers and historians.
!




            !
                                                      !
        MAPLE RESEARCH DIGITAL COLLECTIONS
            !

            !



        !
                                              !

    THE CENTER FOR DIGITAL
     !!!                                      !!
    INITIATIVES
    http://cdi.uvm.edu
     !
                                    The Center for Digital Initiatives (CDI) makes unique research
    !
                                    collections available online. This digital library offers powerful
                                    search and browse capabilities and accepts a variety of formats -
                                    from film to historic photographs to born-digital files. It is the
                                    UVM Libraries' goal that students, faculty, staff, scholars, and
                                    community members participate as users and creators of digital
                                    resources in an open, collaborative environment. The CDI works
                                    with users to integrate digital collections in their research,
                                    teaching, and learning strategies.



THE MAPLE COLLECTIONS:
COLLABORATION FROM PRODUCTION TO PUBLICITY
"#$%!&'(()&*$'+!,-%!&.)-*)/!01!&'((-0'.-*$'+!0)*,))+!%)2).-(!345!6$0.-.$)%!7+$*%8!$+&(7/$+9!*#)!:;<8!
<+='.>-*$'+!?!<+%*.7&*$'+!@).2$&)%8!:-*-('9$+98!-+/!@1%*)>%A!!"#$%!&'(()&*$'+!,-%!*#)!=$.%*!:;<!&'(()&*$'+!
/)%$9+)/!*'!0)!BC7(()/!'7*D!$+*'!-+'*#).!.)%'7.&)8!*#)!5-C()!E)%)-.&#!F)0%$*)A!!F$*#!*#)!$+&(7%$'+!'=!
C#'*'9.-C#%!=.'>!345G%!H.'&*'.!5-C()!E)%)-.&#!:)+*).8!$*!,-%!-(%'!*#)!=$.%*!*'!/$9$*$I)!-.&#$2-(!>-*).$-(!
#'7%)/!'7*%$/)!'=!*#)!($0.-.1A!!"#$%!&'((-0'.-*$'+!#-%!%).2)/!-%!-!>'/)(!='.!=7*7.)!,'.J!&'>C()*)/!-%!
C-.*!'=!*#)!:;<G%!9'-(!*'!&.)-*)!B-+!'C)+8!&'((-0'.-*$2)!)+2$.'+>)+*AD!!"#)!&'((-0'.-*$2)!+-*7.)!'=!
C.'/7&$+9!*#)!&'(()&*$'+!C.)C-.)/!7%!='.!*#)!$++'2-*$2)!5-C()!F))J!C70($&$*1!%*.-*)91!'=!07$(/$+9!
0.$/9)%!0)*,))+!2-.$)/!-+/!/$%C-.-*)!7%).!9.'7C%A!
!
!




          !
                                                      !
MAPLE RESEARCH DIGITAL COLLECTIONS
          !

          !



      !
          !

!!!


!




          !!

MAPLE RESEARCH COLLECTION
260 items, covers 1890-1988
Documents the history of maple research at the University of Vermont.
Includes a selection of photographs taken between 1948-1957 from the archives of the Proctor Maple
Research Center (PMRC), a field station of the first permanent maple research facility in the United States.
Also includes the published University of Vermont Agricultural Extension bulletins on maple research
(1890-1988) as well as technical reports and a collection of producers’ labels.


MAPLE RECIPES COLLECTION
49 items, covers 1890-1988
The Maple Recipe collection offers a unique glimpse at the variety in maple sugar and maple syrup use over
the last half-century, as it is prominently featured in a range of dishes, from the sweet to the savory.
The collection includes entrees, side dishes, appetizers, breads and desserts, and draws recipes from a
variety of sources, including commercial cookbooks, regional cookbooks, and community cookbooks. The
materials in this collection are a small sampling of the cookbook collection in the University of Vermont
Libraries Department of Special Collections.


                                                             Users can browse all 260 items in list or
                                                             thumbnail form.
                                                             A browse page also helps users access items
                                                             from lists of creators, places, topics (Library
                                                             of Congress Subject Headings), and format.
                                                             Users can search within a collection, or
                                                             across all CDI collections. There are maple
                                                             resources in nine of the CDI’s collections.
                                                             Users can leave comments on individual
                                                             items, view larger images, and read a full
                                                             description based on the metadata record.
!




          !
                                                                                      !
VERMONT: AN AGRICULTURAL OVERVIEW
          !

          !



      !
          !

!!!       !

          !                                                                                           Vermont is the 8th smallest state, with a total
!
                                                                                                      land area of less than 10,000 square miles; we
          !
                                                                                                      are 90.3 miles across at the Canadian border,
                                                                                                      and 41.6 miles across at the Massachusetts
                                                                                                      border.

                                                                                                      Vermont’s population is 620,000, with
                                                                                                      approximately two-thirds of them living in
                                                                                                      rural areas.

                                                                                                      Vermont leads New England in farming, with
                                                                                                      approximately 7,000 farms.

                                                                                                      20% of private jobs and 31% of private
                                                                                                      business in the state are related to the
                                                                                                      production and processing of agricultural
                                                                                                      goods.

                                                                                                      Vermont leads the country in maple
                                                                                                      production, producing 890,000 gallons of maple
                                                                                                      syrup in 2010, or roughly 45% of the U.S. total.

                                                                                                      Maple production is the third largest
                                                                                                      agricultural commodity produced by the state,
                                                                                                      yielding approximately $15 million in direct
                                                                                                      sales each year, with an economic impact in
                                                                                                      Vermont of over $225 million annually.

                                                                                                      The Vermont Maple Sugar Makers’
                                                                                                      Association is the oldest known agricultural
                                                                                                      organization in the country, founded in 1892.

                                                                                                      The Vermont Maple Sugar Makers’
                                                                                                      Association boasts a membership of over 2,000
                                                                                                      maple producers, ranging from large-scale
                                                                                                      industries to small-scale backyard and hobby
                                                                                                      producers.




                   Total Percentage of Vermont                                                       2010 Maple Production
                    Agricultural Commodities                                                           (in 1,000 Gallons)
                                                                                          EAA!
                           =9934-!                                                        7AA!
      :%445;(*-4<                                                                         DAA!
                            >0!                      8$-+?!
        5*%-4%&!                                                                          .AA!
                                                     @>0!                                 /AA!
          /0!
              8#934!                                                                      CAA!
            '%()*+,-!                                                       "#$%&!        >AA!
                                                                          '%()*+,-!       BAA!
               .0!                                                                        @AA!
                                                                            ./0!            A!
                  1#234!#5)!
                    1#364-!
                     70!


              F5$,4)!G,#,4-!"49#%,H45,!(I!=J%$+*3,*%4K!T+(5(H$+!O4-4#%+;!G4%6$+4!           F5$,4)!G,#,4-!"49#%,H45,!(I!=J%$+*3,*%4K!L#,$(5#3!=J%$+*3,*%#3!G,#,$-,$+-!
              MTOGN?!'.".%&/"0.&'1%%.23&4%)567.&+,-,?!O4,%$464)!L(64HP4%!BCK!BA@AK!         G4%6$+4!ML=GGN?!!"#$%&'()*#&+,-,?!O4,%$464)!L(64HP4%!BCK!BA@AK!I%(HQ!
              I%(HQ!;,,9Q<<RRR?4%-?*-)#?J(6<-,#,4I#+,-<UV?WV8!                              ;,,9Q<<RRR?5#--?*-)#?J(6<G,#,$-,$+-SP&SG,#,4<L4RST5J3#5)S$5+3*)4-<'*
                                                                                            P3$+#,$(5-<A.A/H93?9)I!
!




           !
                                                                   !
 UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT: BY THE NUMBERS
           !

           !



 !!!   !
 !




           !
The University of Vermont and State Agricultural College,
more !commonly known as the University of Vermont (UVM),
was chartered in 1791, the same year Vermont became the
      !
14th state.
      "!

Originally a private institution, the passage of the Morrill
Land-Grant College Act in 1862 established the university as
the state’s land-grant institution, adding to its core mission               WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE FROM CAMPUS…

agricultural research and extension.                                             •   1 of the most beautiful lakes in the world — the
                                                                                     sixth largest freshwater lake in the U.S. (Lake
The university has an enrollment of approximately 10,000                             Champlain)
                                                                                 •   9 theatre and concert venues
undergraduate students, 1,500 graduate students, and 500                         •   40 art galleries and venues
                                                                                     13 coffee shops
medical students, and a full-time faculty of 2,000.                              •
                                                                                 •   8 night clubs
                                                                                 •   100+ restaurants and bistros
UVM offers 100 bachelor’s programs, 5 pre-professional                           •   11 different types of international cuisine
                                                                                     2 shopping malls
options, 54 master’s programs, 22 doctoral programs, and an                      •
                                                                                 •   1 of the oldest minor league baseball parks still in
M.D. program through the College of Medicine.                                        use in the country (Centennial Field, home of the
                                                                                     Vermont Lake Monsters)
                                                                                 •   1 house museum belonging to a Revolutionary War
Bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral programs are offered                               hero (Ethan Allen)
through the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, the                        •   14 parks
                                                                                 •   3 sand beaches
College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Education and                       •   1 community sailing center
                                                                                     17 religions represented by their houses of worship
Social Services, the College of Engineering and Mathematical                     •
                                                                                 •   354 acres of agricultural and wild land located in
Sciences, the College of Medicine, the College of Nursing and                        Burlington's Intervale along the banks of the
                                                                                     Winooski River
Health Sciences, the Graduate College, the School of                             •   12-mile pedestrian path along Lake Champlain
Business Administration, and the Rubenstein School of
                                                                             !
Environment and Natural Resources.


BURLINGTON, VERMONT

The university’s 451-acre campus is located in Burlington, Vermont.
Burlington, the largest city in the state, has a population of 39,000; the
population for the entire state of Vermont is 620,000.

The urbanized area consists of the cities of Burlington, South
Burlington, and Winooski; the towns of Colchester, Essex and Williston;
and the village of Essex Junction. This metropolitan area has an
estimated population of 140,000, or approximately one-fourth of the
state’s total population.

As defined by the U.S. Census Bureau, no part of the state met the
characteristics of a metropolitan area until 1980.
!




      !
                                                               !
 MAPLE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT
      !

      !



  !
      !
Basic !!
 !!!
      and applied maple research began at the University of Vermont in the early 1890s, when C. H. (Charles Howard) Jones,
head of the UVM Agricultural Experiment Station and a prominent early maple sugar chemist, conducted seminal research on
the biology of maple trees to better understand the sap flow mechanism and its dependence on meteorological changes, as well
 !
as the considerable variance in sap sugar content.

                                              Through the years, UVM has had numerous prominent maple researchers,
                                              scientists and educators, including Frederick Laing, whose research helped
                                              develop and improve methods of installing plastic tubing and directed
                                              improvements in using vacuum pumps to increase sap yields, and Mariafranca
                                              Morselli, who brought a greater understanding to the role of microorganisms in
                                              determining syrup grade, as well as developing methods to detect adulteration
                                              of maple syrup by adding other sugars. Most recently, current director of the
                                              Proctor Maple Research Center Timothy Perkins patented a tap that prevents
                                              bacterial contamination and backflow of sap, which has a dramatic impact on
                                              maple syrup production.


PROCTOR MAPLE RESEARCH CENTER
In 1946, James Marvin and Fred Taylor founded the Proctor Maple Research Center with a donation by Governor Mortimer
Proctor of the former “Harvey Farm” in Underhill Center, Vermont, to UVM. For the first year of operation, research on sap
flow, maple tree physiology, and the economics of maple production were conducted in an 8’ x 12’ shed. In 1948, the first
sugarhouse was constructed to allow research on syrup production techniques, followed several years later by the C. H. Jones
Laboratory (which served as the primary research laboratory until it burned down in 1998).

Today, the Proctor Maple Research Center consists of 200 acres of wooded and open land. Approximately 40 acres are an
actively managed sugarbush for maple syrup production and research. The center also includes the main laboratory building,
which contains modern research facilities, a sugarhouse, the Maple Production Research Facility, sap storage and barrel
storage sheds, and several small outlying research buildings.




MAPLE + UVM LIBRARIES                                                     FOOD SYSTEMS “SPIRE OF
                                                                          EXCELLENCE”
The UVM Archives contains over 120 linear feet of maple
materials, dating from the 1890s to the present, which                    In May 2010, Food Systems was named as a “Spire of
                                                                          Excellence” for the University of Vermont, with a focused
includes research papers of faculty members, photographs,
                                                                          investment intended to give UVM the ability to inform
samples of sugaring equipment, pamphlets and other                        complex 21st century issues surrounding food production,
publications, and class teaching materials.                               processing, transportation, consumption and removal. This
                                                                          research area focuses on the critical role of our local and
The Department of Special Collections holds a large                       regional food systems as they, in turn, affect soil and water
collection of published monographs on maple research from                 quality, human health and nutrition, economics, packaging
                                                                          and transportation interests, and overall food and energy
the Agriculture Experiment Station, the Vermont                           security. This Spire will be grown from one of the strongest
Department of Agriculture, and other Vermotn                              applied research and scholarship strengths at UVM: our
organizations, dating from the late nineteenth century to                 connection to Vermont’s working landscape. Positioned to
                                                                          build on our existing partnerships with Vermont farms and
present. It also includes eleven interviews on maple sugaring
                                                                          communities, the Spire also takes advantage of existing
and maple history in its oral history collection.                         Food Systems research expertise and public interest in
                                                                          sustainable, secure, and healthy food systems.
!




       !
                                                                   !
 VERMONTERS: A LOVE AFFAIR WITH MAPLE
       !

       !



   !
       !

“SUGARING” PARTIES AND SUGAR-ON-SNOW
 !!! !

Maple! sugaring is a sociable activity, drawing workers together to help collect sap and boil it down to syrup and sugar.
  !
“Sugaring off” parties began in the late 1700s, as colonists celebrated the boiling of the season’s first batch of sap. The imagery
       !
of these parties was captured by a number of painters in the 1800s, most famously Eastman Johnson, whose maple sugar
paintings celebrated New England’s ingenuity, ruggedness, independence, and community spirit.

From the 1930s through the 1950s, the Dean Joseph Hills Sugar Party was held at the University of Vermont to highlight the
importance of maple and maple research to the economy of the state. Dean Hills arranged for students to be transported from
UVM to the sugarbush, where they would enjoy sugar-on-snow (hot maple syrup poured on well-packed snow), plain donuts,
hot coffee and pickles.

For the past twenty years, the Vermont Maple Industry Council’s Maple History Committee has revived this tradition, hosting
an annual Sugar-on-Snow party in front of Bailey/Howe Library to celebrate the Vermont tradition of maple sugaring with a
taste of the year’s first maple harvest.




                                                                           In 1935, the Vermont State Farm Bureau decided to
 VERMONT MAPLE FESTIVAL
                                                                           “make the American people more maple-syrup
 1935 marked the first statewide spring Maple Festivals. For               conscious” and held the first statewide maple festival.
 the past fifty years, a group of dedicated volunteers from                Cooks were invited to make a cake and enter it in the
 across Vermont have continued the tradition with the annual               cake contest. The contest was held in 134 towns, and
 Vermont Maple Festival, held in St. Albans, Vermont, at the               1,500 cooks offered their best maple-frosted cakes. The
                                                                           first-prize winner, Mrs. Arthur Way, took her cake all
 end of the sugaring season. This event annually attracts
                                                                           the way to the White House for the President’s table.
 crowds of over 50,000 people.
                                                                           Her frosting was made by cooking one pint of maple
 The Vermont Maple Festival celebrates sugaring and focuses                syrup until it threaded. A beaten egg white was poured
 attention on the entire state. One of the goals of the festival is        into it and stirred until the mixture attained a
 to promote and market Vermont’s famous product – sugar-on-                consistency suitable for spreading.
 snow, maple cotton candy, maple cream doughnuts, maple
 candy, maple creemees (soft serve), maple popcorn, pure
 maple syrup, and more.

 As the first agricultural festival of the year, the event
 includes maple syrup and cooking contests, crafts, antique
 and specialty food shows, a pancake breakfast and a maple
 awards banquet, maple exhibits and demonstrations, and
 sugar house tours. To cap it all off is the huge Vermont Maple
 Festival Parade, featuring bands, horse-drawn maple-themed
 floats, and Vermont’s Maple King and Queen.

 In recent years, the festival has been featured on the Food
 Network’s All American Festivals; it was named one of the                  VERMONT MAPLE OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND
 Top 100 Festivals in North American by the American Bus
                                                                            The Vermont Maple Open House weekend is the
 Association; and Vermont Public Television includes recipes
                                                                            official celebration of the maple season, when
 from the festival in their “Vermont Cooks with Maple”
                                                                            sugarhouses around the state are open to visitors.
 program.
!




          !
                                                !
AGRICULTURE NETWORK INFORMATION CENTER (AgNIC)
          !

          !



      !
          !

!!!                                                     !   The Agriculture Network Information Center
                                                            (AgNIC), sponsored by the National
                                                        !   Agricultural Library and the United States
!
                                                        !   Department of Agriculture, is an alliance of
                                                            land-grant universities and nonprofit
                                                            organizations whose mission is to preserve and
                                                            disseminate digital agricultural information.

                                                            AgNIC recognizes that agriculture impacts the
                                                            lives of individuals and communities around
                                                            the world, and believes the need and
                                                            importance of easily accessible agricultural
                                                            information enables sustainable and
                                                            prosperous communities.

                                                            Strategic partnerships with AgNIC mutually
                                                            benefit the National Agricultural Library and
                                                            the member institution by helping preserve
                                                            and promote local or institutional agricultural
                                                            information at a national and international
                                                            level.

                                                            AgNIC membership is organized around areas
With the support of the Dean of Extension and the           of subject expertise; member organizations are
                                                            responsible for creating an agricultural
Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences,       information portal on their area of agricultural
the University of Vermont Libraries submitted an            expertise.
application to become a member of AgNIC in April            Current AgNIC subjects include: agricultural
2007, requesting to take on the responsibility of           economics, water quality, geospatial data,
creating a maple research website.                          agricultural law, soybeans, cattle, forestry,
                                                            turfgrass, American cranberry, aquaculture,
The application was accepted and UVM Libraries              entomology, farmland preservation, and home
                                                            gardening.
became full members of AgNIC in May 2007.
!




              !
                                                                    !
    STRATEGIC COMMUNICATION PLANNING
              !

              !



          !
                                          !

    !!!                                   ! The strategic planning culminated in Maple Week, a week of programming and
                                            promotional activity developed to feature the Maple Research Website and
                                          !
    !                                       associated collections to campus and local community audiences. This week
                                          ! included a Maple Cook-Off, which served as the flagship event; a lecture by
                                            Middlebury College Professor John Elder on the relationship between maple
                                            sugaring traditions and contemporary environmental challenges; exhibits
                                            illuminating the history of maple sugaring in Vermont, cooking with maple, and
                                            Vermont women’s contributions to the maple industry; a reception; and the
                                            public launch of the website itself.

The strategic planning culminated in Maple Week, a week of programming and promotional activity developed to feature
the Maple Research Website and associated collections to campus and local community audiences. This week included a
Maple Cook-Off, which served as the flagship event; a lecture by Middlebury College Professor John Elder on the
relationship between maple sugaring traditions and contemporary environmental challenges; exhibits illuminating the
history of maple sugaring in Vermont, cooking with maple, and Vermont women’s contributions to the maple industry; a
reception; and the public launch of the website itself.

Campus and community audiences were categorized and sub-divided for the purposes of targeted outreach. Campus
targets included: relevant student clubs; students in the environmentally-focused GreenHouse residential learning
community; Growing Vermont (a cooperative student-run business featuring local products); faculty members with
curricular overlap; the Vermont Food Systems Collaborative; and the Center for Research on Vermont. Community
targets included: maple producers; farmers; chefs, critics, and food bloggers; local food enthusiasts; environmentalists,
educators, high school students, and the general public.

Goals of the Maple Week communications strategy were:
  •to direct people to the Maple Research Website
  •to secure attendance at Maple Week events
  •to ensure consistent branding
  •to promote the diversity of collections and services available at the Libraries, through the example of maple research
      resources
  •to bring together constituents who often function separately, thus highlighting the Libraries’ role as both a campus
      and community resource

Measurable objectives included:
  •media placement about Maple Week and the Maple Research Website
  •attendance at Maple Week events
  •participation in the Maple Cook-Off (e.g. the numbers and range of entries and attendees; the quality of entries; the
     caliber of judges and other participants)
  •Maple Research Website and Center for Digital Initiatives site traffic


As a result of our distributed, team-based approach, we needed a robust tool for project management and internal
communications. Basecamp, a software product already in use by the CDI, was used to set milestones, create
collaborative documents, track feedback on plans, and manage to-do lists.

External communications strategies were varied and included collaboration with University of Vermont Communications;
press release distribution; traditional print publicity such as posters, postcards, and direct mailings; in-person outreach;
aggressive and targeted email/listserv campaigns; a television appearance; promotion on library and campus websites; and
the use of social media. A detailed publicity plan, outlining communication action steps and responsibilities, was
incorporated into Basecamp.

MAPLE WEEK BUDGET
CASH                               IN-KIND
Maple Cook-Off           $886.80   Elizabeth Berman [75 hours]          $2,115.75
John Elder Event           $100    Selene Colburn [60 hours]            $1,877.40
Exhibits                  $62.00   Prudence Doherty [50 hours]          $1,420.00
Reception                $100.83   Robin Katz [34 hours]                 $919.36
Publicity                $172.68   Additional Personnel [8 hours]        $117.36
                                   In-House Printing and Mailing         $423.90
                                   Donated Prizes                        $150.00
Sub-Total              $1,322.31   Sub-Total                            $7,023.73
                                   TOTAL                                $8,346.04

!
!




          !
                                              !
GOALS & OBJECTIVES
          !

          !



!
          !

!!!       !
GOALS     !
!

      •   to direct people to the Maple
          !


            Research Website

      •       to secure attendance at Maple
               Week events

      •       to ensure consistent branding

      •       to promote the diversity of
               collections and services
               available at the Libraries,
               through the example of maple
               research resources

      •       to bring together constituents
               who often function separately,
               thus highlighting the Libraries’
                                                  OBJECTIVES
               role as both a campus and
               community resource                     •!"#$%&!'(&)#"#*+!&,-.+!
!
                                                         /&'(#!0##1!&*$!+2#!/&'(#!
                                                         3#4#&5)2!0#,4%+#!
                                                      !
                                                      •!&++#*$&*)#!&+!/&'(#!0##1!

                                                         #6#*+4!
                                                  !
                                                      •   !'&5+%)%'&+%-*!%*!+2#!/&'(#!
                                                            7--189::!;#<=<!+2#!*.",#54!
                                                            &*$!5&*=#!-:!#*+5%#4!&*$!
                                                            &++#*$##4>!+2#!?.&(%+@!-:!
                                                            #*+5%#4>!+2#!)&(%,#5!-:!
                                                            A.$=#4!&*$!-+2#5!
                                                            '&5+%)%'&*+4B!
                                                  !
                                                      •   !/&'(#!3#4#&5)2!0#,4%+#!
                                                           &*$!7#*+#5!:-5!C%=%+&(!
                                                           D*%+%&+%6#4!4%+#!+5&::%)!
                                                  !
!




        !
                                                           !
TARGET AUDIENCES
        !

        !



    !
        !
CAMPUS AUDIENCES
!!! !

    • !     Growing Vermont, a cooperative student-run
!
        !   business featuring local products;

    •       The Vermont Food Systems Research Collaborative,
            a project of UVM’s Center for Rural Studies that
            exists to join on-campus and off-campus
            organizations in efforts to further food system
            research;

    •       The Center for Research on Vermont, an
            interdisciplinary network of scholars and
            community members who share information, ideas,
            and research on Vermont;

    •       Relevant academic departments including Plant
            Biology, Geology, Rural Studies, Vermont Studies,
            Geography, Environmental Studies, Nutrition &
            Food Sciences, and Plant & Soil Science; and

    •       Approximately twenty relevant student groups,
            including the Vermont Student Environmental
            Program, Common Ground (student-run farm),
            Horticulture Club, Campus Kitchens, Feel Good,
            Dairy Club, Old Time Music Club, Slow Food VT –
            UVM, Gluten-Free Club, and the Society of
            American Foresters.


COMMUNITY AUDIENCES

    •       Maple producers (Chittenden County members of Vermont Maple Sugar Maker’s Association);

    •       Farmers (Burlington Farmers’ Market vendors, and farmers associated with organizations such
            as the Vermont Fresh Network, the Northeast Organic Farming Association and the Center for
            an Agricultural Economy);

    •       Chefs and restaurateurs (including all Chittenden County listings in the local Seven Nights
            dining guide with email contact information);

    •       Food critics and bloggers (including food writers at the Burlington Free Press, SevenDays,
            Vermont Life, Edible Green Mountains, and Local Banquet);

    •       Local food enthusiasts (including Community Supported Agriculture program members and
            localvore clubs, including Green Drinks and Slow Food Vermont);

    •       Environmentalists;

    •       Educators (including regional representatives of Educational Service Agencies);

    •       High school students; and

    •       General public.
!
!




      !
                                              !
COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES & TOOLS
      !

      !



 !
      !

A detailed publicity plan was created and shared as a writeboard on Basecamp, so all team
!!!!

members could edit and improve on it. When the plan was finalized, tasks were turned into
   !
!
trackable to-do items in the program.
   !




                                                          BASECAMP
                                                          Basecamp, by 37signals, is an online
                                                          project management tool. It allows
                                                          for teams to easily communicate,
                                                          share files, create to-do lists and
                                                          assign tasks, create milestones, and
                                                          collaborate on documents.

                                                          The CDI had a Premimum account,
                                                          which the Maple Week Committee
                                                          was able to use to coordinate the
                                                          promotion and planning for the
                                                          Maple Research Website Launch.
!




      !
                                                       !
 BUDGET
      !

      !



  !
      !

While the! cash budget for Maple Week was relatively low, the in-kind contributions were
 !!! !

significant. If anything, personnel time estimates are on the conservative side. In-kind
     !                                            !
 !   !
contributions account for 84% of the final budget, and the bulk of these are faculty and staff
time. We learned that a lot can be done with a very small budget, but only if people are
     !

powering the effort.
     !



                     CASH
                     Maple Cook-Off: books [prizes]                         $49.27
                     Maple Cook-Off: musicians                             $225.00
                     Maple Cook-Off: Davis Center [space rental]           $292.50
                     Maple Cook-Off: Davis Center [misc. expenses]          $16.88
                     Maple Cook-Off: food and décor                        $235.88
                     Cash deposit for books                                 $67.27
                     John Elder Event: honorarium                             $100
                     Reception: refreshments                               $100.83
                     Exhibits: Vermont maple giveaways                      $62.00
                     Publicity: postcard printing expenses                 $172.68
                                                     Cash Sub-Total      $1,322.31

                     IN-KIND
                     Personnel: Elizabeth Berman [75 hours]              $2,115.75
                     Personnel: Selene Colburn [60 hours]                $1,877.40
                     Personnel: Prudence Doherty [50 hours]              $1,420.00
                     Personnel: Robin Katz [34 hours]                      $919.36
                     Personnel: Sharon Thayer [4 hours]                     $78.36
                     Personnel: Ana Banu [4 hours]                          $39.00
                     Publicity: 200 color 11x17 posters                     $50.00
                     Publicity: 200 color 8!x11 posters                     $30.00
                     Publicity: 300 misc. black & white printing            $30.00
                     Publicity: 50 color Maple Cook-Off entry signs          $7.50
                     Publicity: 400 color Special Collections printing      $60.00
                     Publicity: Special Collections mailing                $232.00
                     Publicity: Mailing to maple producers                  $14.40
                     Donated Prizes                                        $150.00
                                                  In-Kind Sub-Total      $7,023.73

                                                            TOTAL $8,346.04
!




      !
                                                       !
 IMPLEMENTATION
      !

      !



  !
      !

The ambitious planning strategy included both general and targeted outreach across a variety of media.
  !!! !
Press releases describing individual events and the week as a whole were sent to approximately 75 local
      !
media contacts. Print postcards and posters created to advertise Maple Week were distributed throughout
  !
      !
the local community by volunteer members of the library faculty and staff, and on campus by a student
worker. Targeted audiences received mailed invitations to John Elder’s talk and the Maple Week reception,
including 500 friends of Special Collections. Blog postings about individual events and the website launch
were featured prominently on the library homepage, and were distributed via the Libraries’ Facebook and
Twitter accounts, as well as by individual library subject liaisons.
                                         Maple producers across the state were holding open houses the
                                         weekend of the Maple Cook-Off and we sent participating producers a
                                         letter about the Maple Research Website and Maple Week, and asked
                                         them to share promotional postcards with visitors. We attended the
                                         Burlington Winter Farmers’ Market and shared postcards with
                                         vendors and attendees; multiple vendors agreed to share postcards
                                         throughout the day. The website and Maple Week events were
                                         featured on an episode of Across the Fence, a local television program
                                         that is the longest-running daily farm and home television program in
                                         the country and that has an estimated daily audience of 25,000
                                         viewers.
A robust email outreach effort formed a big part of our strategy. We sent email notices to maple producers,
multiple local foods groups and non-profits, Front Porch Forums (a local neighborhood-based community
organizing listserv, http://frontporchforum.com/), educator networks, community-supported agriculture
programs, organic farming organizations, food bloggers and critics, and scores of local restaurants. Student
and faculty networks targeted on campus included multiple academic departments, individual faculty
members, residential learning programs, interdisciplinary centers, and about twenty student groups ranging
from the Horticultural Club to the Food Salvage Club. This was a low-cost and effective way to efficiently
reach prospective audiences.
Campus and community partners recruited for participation in the Maple Cook-Off also
helped recruit attendees . These partners included: popular local restaurants which
donated pizes and judges Suzanne Podhaizer (food critic for Burlington’s alternative
weekly paper), Sue Bette (owner of the Bluebird Tavern, a James Beard-nominated
restaurant), Sarah Lyons (a maple producer), and Kate Turcotte (undergraduate
majoring in ecological agriculture). We also worked with students from the GreenHouse
residential learning community who gave a maple taste-testing based on the sediment of
nearby soils; representatives of Growing Vermont, a student-run business featuring local
products; and Island Homemade Ice Cream, who heard about the event and asked to
distribute free samples of their new maple-bacon ice cream.

The Maple Week activities and targeted promotional campaign were designed to showcase the Maple
Research Website and to draw attention to the unique special collections; promotion of the website’s URL
was a consistent element in promotional materials and at the actual event.

Posters and postcards were designed in-house and featured elements of the Libraries’ recent branding efforts,
such as our logo and official fonts, while creating a distinctive and elegant look and feel for Maple Week.
These design elements then carried over into other materials, such as Maple Cook-Off registration forms and
exhibit signage.
!




     !
                                                                             !
    PRESS RELEASE
     !

     !

     !

     !

     !

!

!

!

!

!         For immediate release

          March 11, 2010

          Contact:       Selene Colburn, 802.656.9980, Selene.Colburn@uvm.edu

          Maple Madness: A Week of Celebration at the UVM Libraries

          The University of Vermont Libraries are celebrating the creation of a new Maple Syrup Research Website
          (http://library.uvm.edu/maple) with a week of programs, exhibits, and food, beginning March 28th, 2010.

          A Maple Cook-Off will be held at UVM’s Davis Center on March 28th, from 4 to 6PM, featuring a buffet of maple
          delicacies, music by acoustic trio The Growlers, maple displays, children’s activities, and prizes of gift certificates to local
          eateries (awarded by food critics, activists, and producers). The event is free and open to the public. For more information
          or to register: http://maplecookoff.eventbrite.com

          John Elder, a Professor at Middlebury College, will present “A Party in the Woods: Sugaring, Community, and Celebration
          Under a Changing Sky,” on maple sugaring as a traditional rural lifeway that both illuminates contemporary challenges like
          climate change and exemplifies the need for celebration within environmental thinking today. The talk will take place in
          Bailey/Howe Library’s Special Collections on March 31st, at 5:30 PM, and is co-sponsored by Special Collections and the
          UVM Libraries.

          Elder’s talk will follow a 4:30 PM reception to celebrate the launch of the Maple Syrup Research Website in the
          Bailey/Howe Library lobby.

          Maple exhibits in the Bailey/Howe Library are based on materials selected from the Wilbur Collection of Vermontiana, the
          Maple History Collection, and the collections of UVM’s Proctor Maple Research Center. The featured exhibits (“It’s
          Always Maple Time in Vermont,” “Sweet and Savory: Cooking with Maple,” and “Women’s Contributions to Maple”)
          include images of sugaring-off parties, historic recipes, the story of Helen Nearing, and much, much more. The exhibits are
          located in the Bailey/Howe Library Lobby and in Special Collections. They will be on display through June 2010.

          This Maple Syrup Research Website (http://library.uvm.edu/maple) is a comprehensive subject guide in the field of maple
          syrup, touching on all aspects of maple syrup and sugar maples: maple syrup history, collection and production, marketing,
          nutrition and recipes, sugar maple cultivation, environmental issues and pests and diseases. This website also includes
          historical publications and photographs related to maple syrup research at the University of Vermont.
          This project is a collaboration between the UVM Libraries, the Department of Special Collections, the Center for Digital
          Initiatives, and the Proctor Maple Research Center, with support from UVM Extension, the College of Agriculture and Life
          Sciences, and the Center for Research on Vermont. It was funded in part by the Agriculture Network Information Center
          (AgNIC), in partnership with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the National Agriculture Library.
          For more information, please call 802-656-9980 or e-mail selene.colburn@uvm.edu

          See the Bailey/Howe Library on a campus map: http://www.uvm.edu/map/?Page=MAP&Building=51

          Information on visitor parking at UVM: http://www.uvm.edu/tps/parking/?Page=visitors.html



         Press release distributed in collaboration with University Communications to over
         75 regional press contacts at print, radio, and television outlets.
!


                                                                 !
        !

    MAPLE WEEK POSTCARD & POSTER

    !
"#$%,(!'*)!+#$%&'()!-,(,!),$.4*,)!.*G3#0$,!/2!H#/.*!I'%JK!>.4.%'1!L*.%.'%.9,$!M0%(,'&3!
C./('(.'*K!0$.*4!N)#/,!?<O!L110$%('%#(;!>,$.4*!,1,5,*%$!.*&10),)!@A6!C./('(.,$F!/('*).*4K!
  !!!

$0&3!'$!%3,!1#4#!'*)!:#*%!&3#.&,$K!-3.1,!&(,'%.*4!'!).$%.*&%.9,!1##8!:#(!6'+1,!7,,8B!%3,!
  !
.110$%('%.#*!#:!%3,!%'++,)!%(,,!.$!'*!#(.4.*'1!.110$%('%.#*!/'$,)!#*!+3#%#4('+3$!:(#5!%3,!
?>LF$!6'+1,!H,$,'(&3!?#11,&%.#*;!
DISTRIBUTION
!

"#$%&'()$!'*)!+#$%,($!-,(,!).$%(./0%,)!-.),12!%3(#043#0%!%3,!&'5+0$!'*)!&#550*.%2!/2!%3,!6'+1,!7,,8!&#55.%%,,!
'*)!/2!9#10*%,,(!1./('(2!:'&01%2!'*)!$%'::!5,5/,($;!!!
<'5+1,!1#&'%.#*$!:#(!+#$%,($!'*)!+#$%&'()$!.*&10),)=!
    •       %3,!>'9.$!<%0),*%!?,*%,(!#*!@A6!&'5+0$B!
    •       (,1,9'*%!'&'),5.&!),+'(%5,*%$B!
    •       $%0),*%!&,*%,($!'$!*,'(/2!<'.*%!6.&3',1$!?#11,4,!'*)!?3'5+1'.*!?#11,4,B!
    •       '%!$,(9.&,!+#.*%$!'*)!/.11/#'()$!%3(#043#0%!%3,!@A6!C./('(.,$B!
    •       &'5+0$!/.11/#'()$B!
    •       $%0),*%!)#(5.%#(.,$B!
    •       1#&'1!:##)!$%#(,$!'*)!/0$.*,$$,$B!
    •       1#&'1!3.43!$&3##1$B!
    •       &#::,,!$3#+$B!'*)!
    •       %3,!D0(1.*4%#*!7.*%,(!E'(5,($F!6'(8,%;!
!
!




         !
                                                    !
 LIBRARY WEBSITE BLOGS
         !

         !



     !
         !
Blog postings about individual events, the website launch and the digital collections were featured
 !!! !
prominently on the library’s homepage and the CDI’s homepage in the weeks leading up to Maple Week.
                                                                                               !
 !
!




          !
                    !
LIBRARY WEBSITE BLOGS
          !

          !



      !
          !

!!!                     !

                        !
!
!




          !
                     !
CDI BLOG: “THE MARCH SUGARMAKING TRADITION”
          !

          !



      !
                                       !

!!!                                    !

                                       !
!
!




        !
                                                                          !
    EMAIL AS AN OUTREACH TOOL
        !

        !

        !

                                                !
                                                    Email figured prominently in our promotion plan. It was a
                                                    great way to target very diverse audiences with consistent
                                                !
                                                    messages, and to direct them to online actions they could
                                                !
                                                    take, such as registering for the Cook-Off or visiting the
                                                !
                                                    Maple Research Website. Following mass emailing on March
                                                !   17th, we saw a spike in traffic to the Center for Digital
                                                !   Initiatives Maple Collections.
!
Our email strategy sought to get the message in the hands of individuals who would redistribute
it to their own networks (e.g. presidents of student clubs, academic department administrators,
coordinators of local food clubs, and representatives of educational service agencies), thus
maximizing return from our efforts.

SAMPLE EMAIL TEXT
!                   "!#$%&!'$()**!+#,-&!./0$-1,2.$/!,3$(2!2#&!456!7.3-,-.&+)!6,%*&!8&&9!:.2#!'$(-!*$;,*<$-&!/&2:$-9+=!!
                    >#&!?$$9!@00!$/!6,-;#!AB2#!:.**!3&!,!C-&,2!;&*&3-,2.$/!$0!*$;,*!0$$D+=!!8$(*D!*$<&!2$!+&&!'$(-!&/2-.&+E!

                   !
                   !"#$%&!"'(%))*&+&,%%-&./&0%$%12"34.(&"3&35%&67!&8412"24%)!!
                   !
                   >#&!4/.<&-+.2'!$0!5&-1$/2!7.3-,-.&+!,-&!;&*&3-,2./C!2#&!;-&,2.$/!$0!,!/&:!6,%*&!F'-(%!G&+&,-;#!
                   8&3+.2&!H#22%IJJ*.3-,-'=(<1=&D(J1,%*&K!:.2#!,!:&&9!$0!%-$C-,1+L!&M#.3.2+L!,/D!0$$DL!3&C.//./C!
                   6,-;#!AB2#L!ANON=!!>#&!:&3+.2&!.+!,!;$1%-&#&/+.<&!+(3P&;2!C(.D&!./!2#&!0.&*D!$0!1,%*&!+'-(%L!./;*(D./C!
                   #.+2$-.;,*!%(3*.;,2.$/+!,/D!%#$2$C-,%#+!-&*,2&D!2$!1,%*&!+'-(%!-&+&,-;#!,2!2#&!4/.<&-+.2'!$0!5&-1$/2=!!
                   &
                   0..-&!"#$%9&,4(&:24;%)!!
                   !!!
                   Q!6,%*&!?$$9R@00!:.**!3&!#&*D!,2!456S+!T,<.+!?&/2&-!$/!6,-;#!AB2#L!0-$1!U!2$!VW6L!0&,2(-./C!,!3(00&2!
                   $0!1,%*&!D&*.;,;.&+L!1(+.;!3'!,;$(+2.;!2-.$!>#&!X-$:*&-+L!1,%*&!D.+%*,'+L!;#.*D-&/S+!,;2.<.2.&+L!,/D!
                   %-.Y&+!$0!C.02!;&-2.0.;,2&+!2$!*$;,*!&,2&-.&+!H,:,-D&D!3'!0$$D!;-.2.;+L!,;2.<.+2+L!,/D!%-$D(;&-+K=!!>#&!
                   &<&/2!.+!0-&&!,/D!$%&/!2$!2#&!%(3*.;=!!Z$-!1$-&!./0$-1,2.$/!$-!2$!-&C.+2&-I!
                   #22%IJJ1,%*&;$$9$00=&<&/23-.2&=;$1!!!
                   !!!
                   +&:"23<&4(&35%&,..')!!
                   !!!
                   [$#/!*D&-L!,!W-$0&++$-!,2!6.DD*&3(-'!?$**&C&L!:.**!%-&+&/2!]Q!W,-2'!./!2#&!8$$D+I!F(C,-./CL!
                   ?$11(/.2'L!,/D!?&*&3-,2.$/!4/D&-!,!?#,/C./C!F9'L^!$/!1,%*&!+(C,-./C!,+!,!2-,D.2.$/,*!-(-,*!*.0&:,'!
                   2#,2!3$2#!.**(1./,2&+!;$/2&1%$-,-'!;#,**&/C&+!*.9&!;*.1,2&!;#,/C&!,/D!&M&1%*.0.&+!2#&!/&&D!0$-!
                   ;&*&3-,2.$/!:.2#./!&/<.-$/1&/2,*!2#./9./C!2$D,'=!!>#&!2,*9!:.**!2,9&!%*,;&!./!_,.*&'J`$:&!7.3-,-'S+!
                   F%&;.,*!?$**&;2.$/+!$/!6,-;#!aO+2L!,2!bIaN!W6L!,/D!.+!;$R+%$/+$-&D!3'!F%&;.,*!?$**&;2.$/+!,/D!2#&!456!
                   7.3-,-.&+=!!
                   !!!
                   *D&-S+!2,*9!:.**!0$**$:!,!UIaN!W6!-&;&%2.$/!2$!;&*&3-,2&!2#&!*,(/;#!$0!2#&!6,%*&!F'-(%!G&+&,-;#!
                   8&3+.2&!./!2#&!_,.*&'J`$:&!7.3-,-'!*$33'=!!
                   !!!
                   !"#$%&=>54143)!!
                   !!!
                   6,%*&!&M#.3.2+!./!2#&!_,.*&'J`$:&!7.3-,-'!./;*(D&!.1,C&+!$0!+(C,-./CR$00!%,-2.&+L!#.+2$-.;!-&;.%&+L!2#&!
                   +2$-'!$0!`&*&/!c&,-./CL!,/D!1(;#L!1(;#!1$-&=!!>#&!&M#.3.2+!,-&!*$;,2&D!./!2#&!_,.*&'J`$:&!7.3-,-'!
                   7$33'!,/D!./!F%&;.,*!?$**&;2.$/+=!!>#&'!:.**!3&!$/!D.+%*,'!2#-$(C#![(/&!ANON=!!
                   !!!
                   !.2%&?(/.2@"34.(!!
                   !!!
                   Z$-!1$-&!./0$-1,2.$/L!%*&,+&!;,**!BNARVbVRddBN!$-!&R1,.*!+&*&/&=;$*3(-/e(<1=&D(!
                   !
                   F&&!2#&!_,.*&'J`$:&!7.3-,-'!$/!,!;,1%(+!1,%I!#22%IJJ:::=(<1=&D(J1,%JfW,C&g6QWh_(.*D./CgbO!!
                   !!!
    Recipientsincluded: localvore clubs, Chittenden County restaurants, Community-Supported Agriculture
                   "/0$-1,2.$/!$/!<.+.2$-!%,-9./C!,2!456I!#22%IJJ:::=(<1=&D(J2%+J%,-9./CJfW,C&g<.+.2$-+=#21*!
    (CSA) programs, agricultural non-profits, neighborhood community organizing forums, maple producers,
                     !
    local educators, UVM academic departments and programs, and student clubs.
    !
!




          !
                                     !
TARGETING PRODUCERS: MAPLE OPEN HOUSES
          !

          !



      !
              !
                  One of our most effective strategies was to target local maple and
!!!
              ! agricultural producers.

!             !
                Maple producers across the state were holding open houses the
              ! weekend of the Maple Cook-Off and we sent approximately thirty
                participating Chittenden County producers a letter about the Maple
              !
                Research Website and Maple Week, and asked to share promotional
              ! postcards with visitors.

          !       !

          !

          !

          !

          !

          !

          !

          !

          !

          !

          !
!




          !
                          !
TARGETING PRODUCERS: WINTER FARMERS’ MARKET
          !

          !



      !
          !
!!!
                  !
                    Selene Colburn visited the Winter Farmers’ Market
!                 ! and approached each vendor, leaving postcards for

                  ! them to share with visitors to their stalls. A number

                  !
                    of vendors featured maple baked goods, or maple
                    syrup, and were eager to hear more about Maple
                  !
                    Week. Many of the vendors had already heard about
                  ! the programming, via other networks, and agreed to

                  ! help promote it.

                  ! Burlington is a relatively small town and the team
                    member, a native Burlingtonian, was able to
                  !
                    effectively promote the Maple Cook-Off to a number
                  ! of shoppers and acquaintances.

          !           !




                                             !

                                             !
!


                                                                   !
     !

“ACROSS THE FENCE” TELEVISION APPEARANCE

 !
“Across the Fence” is the longest-running daily farm and home television program in the country. On March
25, 2010, science librarian Elizabeth Berman appeared on the episode “UVM Libraries: Research and
!!!

Records on Maple Sugaring in Vermont,” to promote the Maple Research Website, the digital maple
!
collections and Maple Week events. The show has an estimated daily audience of 25,000 viewers in the
greater Burlington area.

Watch the video online at: http://vimeo.com/12059071

SAMPLE SCRIPT

Intro... Maple syrup. Everyone loves it.

Vermont is the largest producer of maple syrup in the U.S., accounting
for approximately 35% of all U.S. maple production and distribution
(7% of the world’s maple syrup supply).

At the University of Vermont, basic and applied maple research began
in the early 1890s and continues its strong tradition today. The
Proctor Maple Research Center, established in 1946, is an Agricultural
Extension Field Research Station of UVM and has published seminal
maple research in areas such as: sap and syrup production, maple
physiology and genetics, forest ecology and health, and sap and syrup
chemistry…

We have with us today Elizabeth Berman, UVM’s Science &
Engineering Librarian and project manager for the development of
this maple syrup website. Welcome…
!


               !
          !

SOCIAL MEDIA
                   The UVM Libraries
!!!   !            promoted the Maple Week
                   events and the Maple
!
                   Cook-Off using the social
                   media tools Facebook and
                   Twitter.
                   The UVM Libraries
                   Facebook profile has 232
                   friends; the
                   UVM_Libraries Twitter
                   account has 559 followers.
!




    !
                                                       !
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS EXHIBITS
    !

    !

    !




                                                                             !
Special Collections contributed to the Maple Madness promotion with
exhibits in the Bailey/Howe Library’s three exhibit venues. At each
exhibit location, we promoted the Maple Research Website and Maple
Week events. Design elements used in the exhibit were derived from
the maple website template.

Because we know that library patrons and visitors often look at only a
portion of an exhibit, we decided to tell three different stories, each
with sections and items that could easily be viewed and appreciated
individually. Each exhibit contained some items now available in the         !
Center for Digital Initiative’s Maple Research and Maple Recipe
                                                                             !
Collections.

The largest venue contained material about maple sugar and syrup
production through time, with a focus on Vermont producers, inventors,
and researchers. One section highlighted the social aspects of sugaring
season, foreshadowing the Maple Week lecture and Maple Cook-Off. In
addition to the traditional Special Collections exhibit materials (photos,
ephemera, maps, books, manuscripts, etc.), this exhibit included
artifacts from the Proctor Maple Research Center.

In an alcove near the main entrance, maple cookbooks and recipes from
the Vermont Cookbook Collection were displayed in “Sweet and Savory:
Cooking with Maple,” to generate interest in and provide inspiration for
the Maple Cook-Off. Takeaway items available at this exhibit included
postcards for Maple Week, copies of the Official Vermont Maple Cook
Book obtained from the Vermont Maple Foundation, and copies of the
“Vermont Ski Resort and Year-Round Maple Syrup Guide,” published
by Vermont Department of Tourism and Marketing and the Vermont
Sugar Maker’s Association.

The display cases in Special Collections featured the accomplishments
of women in the Vermont maple industry, including the Maple Grove
candymakers, back-to-the-lander and maple entrepreneur Helen
Nearing, and UVM scientist Mariafranca Morselli.

A slideshow of the entire exhibit can be viewed on Flickr at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/askmapleuvm.
!




          !
                                                                                         !
    EXHIBIT: IT’S ALWAYS MAPLE TIME IN VERMONT
          !

          !

          !

          !

          !

!

!

!

!

!




                                                                                              Selected images from the “It’s Always Maple
                                                                                              Time in Vermont” Special Collections exhibit.




    “In the month of March, when the sun has taken a little strength and as the trees enter
    into sap, they, the Indians, make with their hatchets transverse incisions in the trunk
    of the trees, from which trickles in abundance a water which they receive in large
    receptacles of bark. They afterwards cause this water to boil over the fire, which
    consumes all the watery matter, and which thickens the rest into the consistency of
    syrup, or even into cakes of sugar, according to the degree of heat to which they
    subject it.…”
                                                            Joseph-Francois Lafitau




                                                            Joseph-Francois
                                                       Joseph-Francois LafitauLafitau, a French
                                                             Jesuit priest who traveled among
    !
                                                             the Iroquois from 1712-1717
                                                             recorded his observations about
                                                             maple production in his Moeurs
                                                             des sauvages americains compares
                                                             aux moeurs des premiers temps
                                                             (1724). According to Lafitau, the
                                                             French learned to make syrup and
                                                             sugar from the Indians.

                                                             Lafitau’s 1724 book includes a
                                                             European engraver’s illustration of
                                                             the Indians gathering sap and
                                                             making syrup or sugar.
                                                             !
!




       !
                                                                     !
    EXHIBIT: IT’S ALWAYS MAPLE TIME IN VERMONT
       !

       !

       !




                                            !
                                                Maple sugaring was a standard subject for many of the stereoscopic series that
                                            ! documented life and work in the northern United States. These views were
                                                produced ca. 1869 by the Kilburn Brothers of northern New Hampshire.
                                            ! !

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

! “I learn that you deal largely in maple
  sugar and syrup. If so I would like to
! engage all you have this year at a fair         MAPLE EQUIPMENT INDUSTRY
  market price. I want to get 10 tons per
! week to ship to New York City. How much
  of that amount could you furnish?               The invention of the tin can during the Civil War helped
!                                                 initiate the maple equipment industry. With the
                                            !     availability of sheet metal, specialized companies emerged
                                                  to manufacture maple equipment, which had previously
                                                  been made by general metal workers. Vermonters patented
                                                  and produced spouts, buckets, evaporators, cans, and other
                                                  equipment. Some prominent Vermont firms included A.H.
                                                  Soule (St. Albans), Leader Evaporator (Enosburg Falls,
                                                  1888), G.H. Grimm Mfg. Co. (Hudson, Ohio and Rutland,
                                                  Vermont), and Vermont Farm Machinery (Bellows Falls,
                                                  1868). During the second half of the twentieth century,
                                                  technological advances such as plastic tubing, vacuum
                                                  pumps and reverse osmosis systems resulted in much more
                                                  efficient sap gathering and syrup production.!
                                                  !
!




       !
                                                          !
    EXHIBIT: IT’S ALWAYS MAPLE TIME IN VERMONT
       !

       !

                                                      !

                                                      !

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!

!
    RESEARCH AND SUPPORT
!   Vermont’s maple industry has been supported through basic and applied research at the University of
    Vermont’s Agricultural Extension Service and Proctor Maple Research Center. C.H. Jones began research
    on maple chemistry and physiology after coming to UVM in 1896. UVM researchers James Marvin, Fred
    Taylor, Fred Laing, Mariafranca Morselli, among many others, conducted research that has greatly helped
    maple producers in Vermont, the northeastern United States, and Canada.

     In 1888, members of the Vermont Grange organized the Vermont Maple Sugar Exchange to ensure strictly
    pure Vermont maple products and promote maple consumption. The Vermont Sugar Makers Association,
    founded in 1893, continues to advocate for the maple industry and its producers. Through an active
    branding program, the VMSMA promotes and protects the highest quality Vermont maple products. To
    inform producers, VMSMA holds maple schools throughout the state.
!




     !
                            !
    EXHIBIT: IT’S ALWAYS MAPLE TIME IN VERMONT
     !

     !

     !




     !

                  !

                  !

                  !

                  !

                  !

                  !

                  !

                  !

                  !

                  !

                  !

                  !

                  !

!
!




     !
                            !
    EXHIBIT: VERMONT WOMEN CONTRIBUTE TO MAPLE
     !

     !

     !

                                         !

                                         !
                                              THE BUSINESS
                                         !
                                                 WOMEN
                                         !
                                             OF MAPLE GROVE
                                         !




!

                                !

                                !
                                         HELEN NEARING,
                                !   SUGARMAKER AND PROMOTER
                                !

                                              !

                                              !

                                              !

                                              !

                                              !




    MARIAFRANCA MORSELLI,
          SCIENTIST
!




      !
                                                           !
    EXHIBIT: SWEET AND SAVORY, COOKING WITH MAPLE
      !

      !

      !




      !

Maple production may be an important part of Vermont’s agricultural     !
economy, but for most of us, maple is about food.
                                                                        !

The Bailey/Howe Libraries Vermont Cookbook Collection documents         !
the richly varied and creative maple dishes that home cooks and
professional chefs make to delight family members and restaurant        !
guests.
                                                                        !

The sample of cookbooks and recipes displayed here range from an 1888   !
promotional publication to a 2009 cookbook that celebrates fresh
interpretations using Vermont ingredients. There are recipes for        !
dishes that are well-loved and familiar, such as Beatrice Vaughan’s
                                                                        !
Maple Bars, as well as those that are unusual and intriguing, such as
Edith Foulds’ Black-Peppered Maple Cream Pie. Despite maple’s           !
expense, cooks appreciate its unique flavor and local origin, and it
continues to make an important contribution to Vermont’s evolving       !
culinary landscape.
!                                                                       !

!
!




       !
                                                                  !
 MAPLE COOK-OFF
       !

       !



  !
       !

On Sunday, March 28, from 4-6pm, the University of
 !!!  !
Vermont Libraries hosted the “Maple Cook-Off” at the
      !
Davis Student Center. Registration for the event was
 !
handled by the free event-hosting website, Eventbrite; the
      !!!
interface was easy to use and allowed for easy
customization, allowing us to add information about the
judges and prizes, as well as the rules of the competition.

Registration for the event was free and open to the public.
27 competitors entered dishes, with 16 Sweet entries and
11 Savory entries. Entrants were required to incorporate
100% pure maple syrup or sugar into their recipes, and
were asked to bring at least two dozen tastings of their
dish for judges and attendees to enjoy.

Community members did not need to enter a dish in order
to attend.

The doors opened at 4pm, with The Growlers, an energetic
acoustic trio, providing musical entertainment. There were
several additional activities for attendees, including:

   •       Students from the Green House, the environmental
           residential community on campus, hosting a maple
           tasting where they presented several different types
           of maple syrups they made alongside Log Cabin
           Syrup. They provided information about different
           production techniques and how terroir (the “taste of
           place”) affects maple syrup.
   •       Growing Vermont, a student-run store, set-up a
           booth where they were able to sell locally produced
           maple related products, including maple edibles
           (cotton candy, popcorn, and candies and maple
           hardwood frames, ornaments and decorations.
   •       Island Ice Cream, a local ice cream manufacturer,
           gave out free tastings of their maple bacon and
           maple walnut ice creams.
   •       Maple trivia cards were placed on every table,
           highlighting facts and interesting information and
           directing people to the Maple Research Website.
   •       A children’s table, with coloring activities and
           maple-related children’s books.

Judging was based on simple evaluation criteria: 25% (5
points) for appearance, 50% (10 points) for taste, and 25%
(5 points) for use of maple.

Prizes were awarded at the end of the event, with winners
being selected in five categories: Best Sweet Dish, Best
Savory Dish, Best Overall Use of Maple, Best Traditional
Maple Dish, and Best Complete Meal.                                   JUDGES
The Maple Week committee was very hands-on in
                                                                      The Maple Cook-Off recruited a number of impressive judges:
organizing and implementing the Maple Cook-Off. The
                                                                        • Suzanne Podhaizer, food critic for SevenDays,
event coordinator at UVM Conference and Events helped
                                                                           Burlington’s alternative weekly newspaper;
secure a venue and basic amenities, including tables and
                                                                        • Sue Bette, owner of Bluebird Tavern, a James Beard-
chairs, but the set-up and decoration was done by the
                                                                           nominated restaurant;
committee and a number of library staff volunteers.
                                                                        • Sarah Lyons, maple producer, Square Deal Farms; and
Elizabeth Berman served as emcee of the event, while
                                                                        • Kate Turcotte, ecological agriculture major and
other staff ran the check-in booth, coordinated the maple
                                                                           organizer of the Vermont Food Summit.
buffet, and assisted the judges.
!




          !
                        !
MAPLE COOK-OFF: ACTIVITIES
          !

          !



      !
          !

!!!


!




                             !
                             GreenHouse syrup tasting;
                             Growing Vermont




                             !

                             !
                                               The Growlers; Island Ice
                                                    Maple Cook-Off at
!




          !
                                     !
MAPLE COOK-OFF: ENTRIES
          !

          !



      !
          !

!!!


!




              !
                  PRIZES
              !
                A number of local eateries donated
              ! $150 worth of prizes, including:
                   • Magnolia Bistro
                   • Penny Cluse Café
                   • August First Bakery
                   • Hen of the Wood
                   • Shelburne Farms, 2 copies of
                      “Cooking with Shelburne
                      Farms” cookbook
!



    !                       !
    MAPLE COOK-OFF: WINNING RECIPES
    !
    !
!
    !
        !
Maple Beef Explosion – Best Savory Dish
Maple Pulled Pork –Best “Complete Meal”
Maple Cheesecake Bar – Best Sweet Dish
!




       !
                                                      !
    RECEPTION & SPECIAL COLLECTIONS LECTURE
       !

       !

       !

    RECEPTION
    A reception was thrown to celebrate
    the launch of the Maple Research
    Website, and to thank the numerous
    individuals and groups who had made
    the project possible. The reception was
    held in the Bailey/Howe Library H.
    Lawrence McCrorey Gallery.

    Over 30 guests sampled maple-themed
    hors d’oeuvres, including maple
    samosas, balsamic-maple salmon on
    toast, and maple cream tarts.
       !

       !

!




    A PARTY IN THE WOODS: SUGARING, COMMUNITY, AND CELEBRATION UNDER A CHANGING SKY

    Following a reception to celebrate the Maple Syrup Research Website, John Elder, Professor of
    English and Environmental Studies at Middlebury College, presented “A Party in the Woods:
    Sugaring, Community, and Celebration Under a Changing Sky.” The public talk was co-sponsored
    by the UVM Libraries and the Department of Special Collections.

    Elder, an accomplished writer and professor whose work marries literature and environmental
    studies, discussed maple sugaring as a traditional rural lifeway that both illuminates contemporary
    challenges, like climate change, and exemplifies the need for celebration within environmental
    thinking today. In the talk, Elder wove together and reflected upon excerpts from his book-in-
    progress, In Hardwood Groves.
!




      !
                                                         !
 UVM LIBRARIES & MAPLE WEEK BRANDING
      !

      !



  !
      !

In 2007 and 2008, the UVM Libraries Communications Team engaged in branding activities resulting in the
  !!! !
creation of a logo and tagline, designed by the Scoula Group (a local graphic design firm) with significant
input! from Libraries faculty and staff, library users, and University administration. Many adaptations of the
  !
logo were created for individual libraries and for various uses (e.g. black and white, vertical orientation, on a
      !
dark background, etc.).

With the Communications Team, the Scoula Group designed templates for common in-house publications,
such as temporary signage, informational handouts, special reports, newsletters, brochures, and power point
presentations, incorporating the logo and associated design elements.

Standard fonts and color palettes now serve as the basis for in-house print and electronic designs. While
there is still a learning curve “on-the-ground” for how strictly to adhere to guidelines for individual
publications, the overall structure has resulted in more consistent and effective library communications.

Maple Week branding laudably took these guidelines as a starting point and incorporated the Libraries logo
and prescribed fonts. In-house design of posters and flyers, postcards, and Maple Cook-Off registration
materials provided elegant and immediately recognizable messaging about the programming – especially
useful in tying together multiple related collections and events.

Exhibit design echoed the look and feel of the Maple Research Website and a Special Collections mailing
proved more consistent with departmental branding. One of the things we learned from the collaborative
cross-departmental approach was to work toward even more consistent branding and future efforts building
on the Maple Week model, such as promotions for CDI’s KakeWalk at UVM collection, incorporated that
feedback.




  VARIATIONS ON THE UVM LIBRARIES’ LOGO




                                              Trade Gothic LT Std Bold
                                              CenturyStd-Book
                                                                    APPROVED FONTS




 SAMPLE MAPLE WEEK PROMOTIONAL MATERIAL
!




           !
                                                                     !
 EVALUATION!

           !



       !
           !

 !!!
                                                  Approximately 150 people attended the Maple Cook-Off and 27 dishes
                                              !
                                                  were entered into the competition. According to our Maple Cook-Off
                                              !
 !                                                evaluation, our promotional strategy was effective and efficient:
                                              !   nearly half of the respondents heard about the event through word of
                                              !
                                                  mouth, while an additional 20% heard about it through our posters
                                                  and postcards. Press coverage, emails, and social networking also
                                              !
                                                  resulted in Cook-Off attendance, demonstrating the effectiveness of
                                              !   multiple approaches.
                                              !   The event drew in a diverse crowd, attracting students and faculty,
                                              !   local chefs and food enthusiasts, and maple producers and community
                                                  members. In the evaluation, a number of attendees commented on the
                                              !
                                                  strength of the cook-off as a “community event,” bridging the various
                                              !
                                                  constituents we had hoped to target. The quality of the event was
                                              !   highly rated by attendees, with comments praising the maple tasting,
                                              !
                                                  the music, the maple trivia, and above all else the variety and quality
                                                  of the food entries.
           !
Approximately 50 individuals attended John Elder’s lecture on the relationship between maple sugaring
      !
traditions and the environment (typical Special Collections events average anywhere from 25 to 50 people).
The individuals in attendance drew from campus and community populations not traditionally in attendance
      !
at Friends of Special Collections events, indicating a successful outreach strategy.
      !

The reception celebrating the website’s launch was attended by approximately 30 individuals, including the
      !
Dean of the Libraries, the Dean of Extension, the Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, the
      !
Director of Proctor Maple Research Center, and the Director of the Center for Research on Vermont, as well
      !
as a number of faculty and maple producers.
           !
Exhibit viewership is difficult to measure, but appeared to be high, based on the numbers of individuals who
helped themselves to accompanying take-aways; over a hundred copies of a free maple cookbook disappeared
     !

during the course of the exhibit.
     !

Since! its launch in March, the Maple Research Website averages 350 monthly visitors; in the month
following Maple Week and the promotional events, there were over 800 visitors, suggesting a successful
      !
promotional strategy incorporating the website’s URL. The Center for Digital Initiatives maple collections,
      !
also launched in March, average about 250 visitors a month, but saw a significant peak in the weeks leading
up to !Maple Events. On March 18th, there were 387 visits in a single day, likely a result of mass emailings to
targeted listservs on March 17th.
      !

The week of programming and promotion, in particular the Maple Cook-
       !                  !
The Maple successful at directing campus and campus and local publications. Most notably, two local television crews came and
Off, was Week press release appeared in a number of community users to the
filmed !a segment of the Maple Cook-Off, which aired as part of the evening news. A local food blogger wrote a post about the event and
Maple Research Website and at positioning the UVM Libraries as the
participants shared details of their experience via social networking sites such as Facebook.
essential resource for maple related information. The collaborative and
!
wide-ranging approach to promoting related programming and resources
was a first (in scope, if not in theory) for the UVM Libraries and now
serves as a model for future efforts. The CDI has already incorporated
this model and used it to promote events related to the launch of their
KakeWalk at UVM collection in the fall of 2010.

One of the biggest lessons we learned is to tie programs even more directly to related resources by providing
handouts, following up with emails when possible, and driving home the action step of visiting the website at
live events.
!



    !
                                               !
    WEBSITE USAGE STATISTICS
    !
    !
!
    !
        !
Included are website analytics for the Maple Research Website and the CDI Maple
Research Collection and Maple Recipes Collection, and the AskMaple reference
service statistics.
!
MAPLE RESEARCH WEBSITE & ASKMAPLE REFERENCE SERVICE
Statistics from March 1, 2010 to December 1, 2010

    MONTH        VISITS    ASKMAPLE
    March            381          5
    April            801          5
    May              334          0
    June             339          0
    July             105          2
    August           101          4
    September        167          2
    October          248          2
    November         379          3
    TOTAL          2,855         23



CDI COLLECTIONS
Statistics from March 1, 2010 to December 1, 2010

    MONTH        PAGE VIEWS
    March                 820
    April                 508
    May                   317
    June                  231
    July                  486
    August                207
    September             408
    October               546
    November              437
    TOTAL               3,960
John Cotton Dana Award Application: UVM Maple
John Cotton Dana Award Application: UVM Maple
John Cotton Dana Award Application: UVM Maple
John Cotton Dana Award Application: UVM Maple

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John Cotton Dana Award Application: UVM Maple

  • 1. ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! MAPLE MADNESS: PROGRAMMING & PROMOTION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT ! ! ! ! Elizabeth Berman Selene Colburn Prudence Doherty Robin Katz
  • 2. ! ! ! ! ! NEEDS ASSESSMENT ! ! !!! Vermont is the top-ranked state in production of maple syrup, having produced 890,000 gallons of maple syrup in 2010, approximately 45% of ! the total U.S. production and distribution. The state boasts nearly 2,000 maple producers – from large manufacturing operations like Dakin Farms to artisan operations like Dragonfly Sugarworks to backyard hobby producers. The Vermont Maple Sugar Makers’ Association, founded in 1892, is the oldest known agricultural organization in the country. The central role maple plays in the life of Vermonters is evident by the numerous ways it is celebrated throughout the state, including the Vermont Maple Festival, Sugar-on-Snow parties, and the annual Maple Open House Weekends. As a land grant university, the University of Vermont has a well-established legacy of agricultural research. Basic and applied maple research began in the early 1890s and continues today at UVM’s Proctor Maple Research Center, the first permanent maple research facility in the country. The University Archives contains over 120 linear feet of unique maple materials, dating from the 1890s to the present and including faculty research papers, photographs, and samples of sugaring equipment. The UVM Libraries’ Department of Special Collections holds a large collection of published monographs on maple research from organizations through the state, dating from the late nineteenth century to the present, as well as eleven interviews on maple sugaring and maple history in its oral history collection. With access to a wealth of information, both within the libraries and more broadly across the institution, the UVM Libraries was well positioned to be a go-to resource for maple information. In 2007, the University of Vermont Libraries became an institutional member of the Agriculture Network Information Center (AgNIC), and in 2008 applied for and received a grant to create a Maple Research Website. The resulting website (http://library.uvm.edu/maple) is a comprehensive subject guide in the field of maple syrup, pulling together maple resources from institutions across the state. Additionally, the site provides access to the history of maple syrup in Vermont in the form of digitized historic photographs, agricultural extension research bulletins, and maple recipes, created in collaboration with the UVM Libraries’ Center for Digital Initiatives (CDI). The information presented on the Maple Research Website meets the needs of a broad audience, including: •researchers and students, who have access to an extensive maple syrup bibliography and digital primary resources related to maple production •maple producers, who benefit by obtaining current applied research on maple collection and production from a single source •the general public, who benefit from carefully selected content with valid, up-to-date information, including health and nutrition information and the community maple cookbook. The Maple Research Website went live in March of 2010. A team of library faculty created and implemented an aggressive and innovative promotional strategy to enhance discoverability of the website and related physical collections in Special Collections and the University Archives. We promoted the website to the campus and local communities because the resource was created for potential heavy users both internal and external to UVM. Our goal was to make rich and underutilized library resources more discoverable by showcasing the University of Vermont as a leader in maple research, assisting researchers and students in meeting their information needs, and marketing the UVM Libraries as an accessible resource to the community, especially the vibrant local food community. Team members included Elizabeth Berman, Science Librarian and Project Manager for the Maple Research Website; Selene Colburn, Assistant to the Dean of Libraries for External Relations; Prudence Doherty, Special Collections Outreach Librarian; and Robin Katz, Digital Initiatives Outreach Librarian.
  • 3. ! ! ! MAPLE RESEARCH WEBSITE ! ! ! ! The Maple Research Website was created in partnership with the Agriculture Network Information Center (AgNIC), with !!! !! support from the National Agricultural Library. The website is a comprehensive subject guide in the field of maple, meeting the information needs of a broad audience, including researchers, students, maple producers, historians, and community members. ! Information on the website includes: • A history of maple sugaring from the 16th century through present, including a comprehensive timeline and common terminology; • A primer on maple collection and production, including links to maple Extension facilities, trade associations, and equipment manufacturers; • A section on nutrition and recipes, including information about maple syrup grades, the nutritional value of maple syrup, and a community maple cookbook, populated by recipes submitted by local chefs, restaurants, and community members; • A comprehensive bibliography of maple-related literature, including national and international maple statistics; • A digital collection of maple materials, including the University of Vermont’s maple extension bulletins and historical photos of the Proctor Maple Research Center, created in collaboration with UVM’s Center for Digital Initiatives; and • An AskMaple reference service.
  • 4. ! ! ! MAPLE RESEARCH WEBSITE ! ! ! ! !!! !! ! COMMUNITY MAPLE COOKBOOK The Community Maple Cookbook is a virtual collection of maple recipes submitted by community members; all recipes from the Maple Cook-Off are in the cookbook. The cookbook is managed using Wordpress blogging software, which allows for features such as categories and tagging. ASK MAPLE AskMaple is a free maple reference service offered by the UVM Libraries, in collaboration with maple syrup researchers, educators, producers and historians.
  • 5. ! ! ! MAPLE RESEARCH DIGITAL COLLECTIONS ! ! ! ! THE CENTER FOR DIGITAL !!! !! INITIATIVES http://cdi.uvm.edu ! The Center for Digital Initiatives (CDI) makes unique research ! collections available online. This digital library offers powerful search and browse capabilities and accepts a variety of formats - from film to historic photographs to born-digital files. It is the UVM Libraries' goal that students, faculty, staff, scholars, and community members participate as users and creators of digital resources in an open, collaborative environment. The CDI works with users to integrate digital collections in their research, teaching, and learning strategies. THE MAPLE COLLECTIONS: COLLABORATION FROM PRODUCTION TO PUBLICITY "#$%!&'(()&*$'+!,-%!&.)-*)/!01!&'((-0'.-*$'+!0)*,))+!%)2).-(!345!6$0.-.$)%!7+$*%8!$+&(7/$+9!*#)!:;<8! <+='.>-*$'+!?!<+%*.7&*$'+!@).2$&)%8!:-*-('9$+98!-+/!@1%*)>%A!!"#$%!&'(()&*$'+!,-%!*#)!=$.%*!:;<!&'(()&*$'+! /)%$9+)/!*'!0)!BC7(()/!'7*D!$+*'!-+'*#).!.)%'7.&)8!*#)!5-C()!E)%)-.&#!F)0%$*)A!!F$*#!*#)!$+&(7%$'+!'=! C#'*'9.-C#%!=.'>!345G%!H.'&*'.!5-C()!E)%)-.&#!:)+*).8!$*!,-%!-(%'!*#)!=$.%*!*'!/$9$*$I)!-.&#$2-(!>-*).$-(! #'7%)/!'7*%$/)!'=!*#)!($0.-.1A!!"#$%!&'((-0'.-*$'+!#-%!%).2)/!-%!-!>'/)(!='.!=7*7.)!,'.J!&'>C()*)/!-%! C-.*!'=!*#)!:;<G%!9'-(!*'!&.)-*)!B-+!'C)+8!&'((-0'.-*$2)!)+2$.'+>)+*AD!!"#)!&'((-0'.-*$2)!+-*7.)!'=! C.'/7&$+9!*#)!&'(()&*$'+!C.)C-.)/!7%!='.!*#)!$++'2-*$2)!5-C()!F))J!C70($&$*1!%*.-*)91!'=!07$(/$+9! 0.$/9)%!0)*,))+!2-.$)/!-+/!/$%C-.-*)!7%).!9.'7C%A! !
  • 6. ! ! ! MAPLE RESEARCH DIGITAL COLLECTIONS ! ! ! ! !!! ! !! MAPLE RESEARCH COLLECTION 260 items, covers 1890-1988 Documents the history of maple research at the University of Vermont. Includes a selection of photographs taken between 1948-1957 from the archives of the Proctor Maple Research Center (PMRC), a field station of the first permanent maple research facility in the United States. Also includes the published University of Vermont Agricultural Extension bulletins on maple research (1890-1988) as well as technical reports and a collection of producers’ labels. MAPLE RECIPES COLLECTION 49 items, covers 1890-1988 The Maple Recipe collection offers a unique glimpse at the variety in maple sugar and maple syrup use over the last half-century, as it is prominently featured in a range of dishes, from the sweet to the savory. The collection includes entrees, side dishes, appetizers, breads and desserts, and draws recipes from a variety of sources, including commercial cookbooks, regional cookbooks, and community cookbooks. The materials in this collection are a small sampling of the cookbook collection in the University of Vermont Libraries Department of Special Collections. Users can browse all 260 items in list or thumbnail form. A browse page also helps users access items from lists of creators, places, topics (Library of Congress Subject Headings), and format. Users can search within a collection, or across all CDI collections. There are maple resources in nine of the CDI’s collections. Users can leave comments on individual items, view larger images, and read a full description based on the metadata record.
  • 7. ! ! ! VERMONT: AN AGRICULTURAL OVERVIEW ! ! ! ! !!! ! ! Vermont is the 8th smallest state, with a total ! land area of less than 10,000 square miles; we ! are 90.3 miles across at the Canadian border, and 41.6 miles across at the Massachusetts border. Vermont’s population is 620,000, with approximately two-thirds of them living in rural areas. Vermont leads New England in farming, with approximately 7,000 farms. 20% of private jobs and 31% of private business in the state are related to the production and processing of agricultural goods. Vermont leads the country in maple production, producing 890,000 gallons of maple syrup in 2010, or roughly 45% of the U.S. total. Maple production is the third largest agricultural commodity produced by the state, yielding approximately $15 million in direct sales each year, with an economic impact in Vermont of over $225 million annually. The Vermont Maple Sugar Makers’ Association is the oldest known agricultural organization in the country, founded in 1892. The Vermont Maple Sugar Makers’ Association boasts a membership of over 2,000 maple producers, ranging from large-scale industries to small-scale backyard and hobby producers. Total Percentage of Vermont 2010 Maple Production Agricultural Commodities (in 1,000 Gallons) EAA! =9934-! 7AA! :%445;(*-4< DAA! >0! 8$-+?! 5*%-4%&! .AA! @>0! /AA! /0! 8#934! CAA! '%()*+,-! "#$%&! >AA! '%()*+,-! BAA! .0! @AA! ./0! A! 1#234!#5)! 1#364-! 70! F5$,4)!G,#,4-!"49#%,H45,!(I!=J%$+*3,*%4K!T+(5(H$+!O4-4#%+;!G4%6$+4! F5$,4)!G,#,4-!"49#%,H45,!(I!=J%$+*3,*%4K!L#,$(5#3!=J%$+*3,*%#3!G,#,$-,$+-! MTOGN?!'.".%&/"0.&'1%%.23&4%)567.&+,-,?!O4,%$464)!L(64HP4%!BCK!BA@AK! G4%6$+4!ML=GGN?!!"#$%&'()*#&+,-,?!O4,%$464)!L(64HP4%!BCK!BA@AK!I%(HQ! I%(HQ!;,,9Q<<RRR?4%-?*-)#?J(6<-,#,4I#+,-<UV?WV8! ;,,9Q<<RRR?5#--?*-)#?J(6<G,#,$-,$+-SP&SG,#,4<L4RST5J3#5)S$5+3*)4-<'* P3$+#,$(5-<A.A/H93?9)I!
  • 8. ! ! ! UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT: BY THE NUMBERS ! ! !!! ! ! ! The University of Vermont and State Agricultural College, more !commonly known as the University of Vermont (UVM), was chartered in 1791, the same year Vermont became the ! 14th state. "! Originally a private institution, the passage of the Morrill Land-Grant College Act in 1862 established the university as the state’s land-grant institution, adding to its core mission WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE FROM CAMPUS… agricultural research and extension. • 1 of the most beautiful lakes in the world — the sixth largest freshwater lake in the U.S. (Lake The university has an enrollment of approximately 10,000 Champlain) • 9 theatre and concert venues undergraduate students, 1,500 graduate students, and 500 • 40 art galleries and venues 13 coffee shops medical students, and a full-time faculty of 2,000. • • 8 night clubs • 100+ restaurants and bistros UVM offers 100 bachelor’s programs, 5 pre-professional • 11 different types of international cuisine 2 shopping malls options, 54 master’s programs, 22 doctoral programs, and an • • 1 of the oldest minor league baseball parks still in M.D. program through the College of Medicine. use in the country (Centennial Field, home of the Vermont Lake Monsters) • 1 house museum belonging to a Revolutionary War Bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral programs are offered hero (Ethan Allen) through the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, the • 14 parks • 3 sand beaches College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Education and • 1 community sailing center 17 religions represented by their houses of worship Social Services, the College of Engineering and Mathematical • • 354 acres of agricultural and wild land located in Sciences, the College of Medicine, the College of Nursing and Burlington's Intervale along the banks of the Winooski River Health Sciences, the Graduate College, the School of • 12-mile pedestrian path along Lake Champlain Business Administration, and the Rubenstein School of ! Environment and Natural Resources. BURLINGTON, VERMONT The university’s 451-acre campus is located in Burlington, Vermont. Burlington, the largest city in the state, has a population of 39,000; the population for the entire state of Vermont is 620,000. The urbanized area consists of the cities of Burlington, South Burlington, and Winooski; the towns of Colchester, Essex and Williston; and the village of Essex Junction. This metropolitan area has an estimated population of 140,000, or approximately one-fourth of the state’s total population. As defined by the U.S. Census Bureau, no part of the state met the characteristics of a metropolitan area until 1980.
  • 9. ! ! ! MAPLE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT ! ! ! ! Basic !! !!! and applied maple research began at the University of Vermont in the early 1890s, when C. H. (Charles Howard) Jones, head of the UVM Agricultural Experiment Station and a prominent early maple sugar chemist, conducted seminal research on the biology of maple trees to better understand the sap flow mechanism and its dependence on meteorological changes, as well ! as the considerable variance in sap sugar content. Through the years, UVM has had numerous prominent maple researchers, scientists and educators, including Frederick Laing, whose research helped develop and improve methods of installing plastic tubing and directed improvements in using vacuum pumps to increase sap yields, and Mariafranca Morselli, who brought a greater understanding to the role of microorganisms in determining syrup grade, as well as developing methods to detect adulteration of maple syrup by adding other sugars. Most recently, current director of the Proctor Maple Research Center Timothy Perkins patented a tap that prevents bacterial contamination and backflow of sap, which has a dramatic impact on maple syrup production. PROCTOR MAPLE RESEARCH CENTER In 1946, James Marvin and Fred Taylor founded the Proctor Maple Research Center with a donation by Governor Mortimer Proctor of the former “Harvey Farm” in Underhill Center, Vermont, to UVM. For the first year of operation, research on sap flow, maple tree physiology, and the economics of maple production were conducted in an 8’ x 12’ shed. In 1948, the first sugarhouse was constructed to allow research on syrup production techniques, followed several years later by the C. H. Jones Laboratory (which served as the primary research laboratory until it burned down in 1998). Today, the Proctor Maple Research Center consists of 200 acres of wooded and open land. Approximately 40 acres are an actively managed sugarbush for maple syrup production and research. The center also includes the main laboratory building, which contains modern research facilities, a sugarhouse, the Maple Production Research Facility, sap storage and barrel storage sheds, and several small outlying research buildings. MAPLE + UVM LIBRARIES FOOD SYSTEMS “SPIRE OF EXCELLENCE” The UVM Archives contains over 120 linear feet of maple materials, dating from the 1890s to the present, which In May 2010, Food Systems was named as a “Spire of Excellence” for the University of Vermont, with a focused includes research papers of faculty members, photographs, investment intended to give UVM the ability to inform samples of sugaring equipment, pamphlets and other complex 21st century issues surrounding food production, publications, and class teaching materials. processing, transportation, consumption and removal. This research area focuses on the critical role of our local and The Department of Special Collections holds a large regional food systems as they, in turn, affect soil and water collection of published monographs on maple research from quality, human health and nutrition, economics, packaging and transportation interests, and overall food and energy the Agriculture Experiment Station, the Vermont security. This Spire will be grown from one of the strongest Department of Agriculture, and other Vermotn applied research and scholarship strengths at UVM: our organizations, dating from the late nineteenth century to connection to Vermont’s working landscape. Positioned to build on our existing partnerships with Vermont farms and present. It also includes eleven interviews on maple sugaring communities, the Spire also takes advantage of existing and maple history in its oral history collection. Food Systems research expertise and public interest in sustainable, secure, and healthy food systems.
  • 10. ! ! ! VERMONTERS: A LOVE AFFAIR WITH MAPLE ! ! ! ! “SUGARING” PARTIES AND SUGAR-ON-SNOW !!! ! Maple! sugaring is a sociable activity, drawing workers together to help collect sap and boil it down to syrup and sugar. ! “Sugaring off” parties began in the late 1700s, as colonists celebrated the boiling of the season’s first batch of sap. The imagery ! of these parties was captured by a number of painters in the 1800s, most famously Eastman Johnson, whose maple sugar paintings celebrated New England’s ingenuity, ruggedness, independence, and community spirit. From the 1930s through the 1950s, the Dean Joseph Hills Sugar Party was held at the University of Vermont to highlight the importance of maple and maple research to the economy of the state. Dean Hills arranged for students to be transported from UVM to the sugarbush, where they would enjoy sugar-on-snow (hot maple syrup poured on well-packed snow), plain donuts, hot coffee and pickles. For the past twenty years, the Vermont Maple Industry Council’s Maple History Committee has revived this tradition, hosting an annual Sugar-on-Snow party in front of Bailey/Howe Library to celebrate the Vermont tradition of maple sugaring with a taste of the year’s first maple harvest. In 1935, the Vermont State Farm Bureau decided to VERMONT MAPLE FESTIVAL “make the American people more maple-syrup 1935 marked the first statewide spring Maple Festivals. For conscious” and held the first statewide maple festival. the past fifty years, a group of dedicated volunteers from Cooks were invited to make a cake and enter it in the across Vermont have continued the tradition with the annual cake contest. The contest was held in 134 towns, and Vermont Maple Festival, held in St. Albans, Vermont, at the 1,500 cooks offered their best maple-frosted cakes. The first-prize winner, Mrs. Arthur Way, took her cake all end of the sugaring season. This event annually attracts the way to the White House for the President’s table. crowds of over 50,000 people. Her frosting was made by cooking one pint of maple The Vermont Maple Festival celebrates sugaring and focuses syrup until it threaded. A beaten egg white was poured attention on the entire state. One of the goals of the festival is into it and stirred until the mixture attained a to promote and market Vermont’s famous product – sugar-on- consistency suitable for spreading. snow, maple cotton candy, maple cream doughnuts, maple candy, maple creemees (soft serve), maple popcorn, pure maple syrup, and more. As the first agricultural festival of the year, the event includes maple syrup and cooking contests, crafts, antique and specialty food shows, a pancake breakfast and a maple awards banquet, maple exhibits and demonstrations, and sugar house tours. To cap it all off is the huge Vermont Maple Festival Parade, featuring bands, horse-drawn maple-themed floats, and Vermont’s Maple King and Queen. In recent years, the festival has been featured on the Food Network’s All American Festivals; it was named one of the VERMONT MAPLE OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND Top 100 Festivals in North American by the American Bus The Vermont Maple Open House weekend is the Association; and Vermont Public Television includes recipes official celebration of the maple season, when from the festival in their “Vermont Cooks with Maple” sugarhouses around the state are open to visitors. program.
  • 11. ! ! ! AGRICULTURE NETWORK INFORMATION CENTER (AgNIC) ! ! ! ! !!! ! The Agriculture Network Information Center (AgNIC), sponsored by the National ! Agricultural Library and the United States ! ! Department of Agriculture, is an alliance of land-grant universities and nonprofit organizations whose mission is to preserve and disseminate digital agricultural information. AgNIC recognizes that agriculture impacts the lives of individuals and communities around the world, and believes the need and importance of easily accessible agricultural information enables sustainable and prosperous communities. Strategic partnerships with AgNIC mutually benefit the National Agricultural Library and the member institution by helping preserve and promote local or institutional agricultural information at a national and international level. AgNIC membership is organized around areas With the support of the Dean of Extension and the of subject expertise; member organizations are responsible for creating an agricultural Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, information portal on their area of agricultural the University of Vermont Libraries submitted an expertise. application to become a member of AgNIC in April Current AgNIC subjects include: agricultural 2007, requesting to take on the responsibility of economics, water quality, geospatial data, creating a maple research website. agricultural law, soybeans, cattle, forestry, turfgrass, American cranberry, aquaculture, The application was accepted and UVM Libraries entomology, farmland preservation, and home gardening. became full members of AgNIC in May 2007.
  • 12. ! ! ! STRATEGIC COMMUNICATION PLANNING ! ! ! ! !!! ! The strategic planning culminated in Maple Week, a week of programming and promotional activity developed to feature the Maple Research Website and ! ! associated collections to campus and local community audiences. This week ! included a Maple Cook-Off, which served as the flagship event; a lecture by Middlebury College Professor John Elder on the relationship between maple sugaring traditions and contemporary environmental challenges; exhibits illuminating the history of maple sugaring in Vermont, cooking with maple, and Vermont women’s contributions to the maple industry; a reception; and the public launch of the website itself. The strategic planning culminated in Maple Week, a week of programming and promotional activity developed to feature the Maple Research Website and associated collections to campus and local community audiences. This week included a Maple Cook-Off, which served as the flagship event; a lecture by Middlebury College Professor John Elder on the relationship between maple sugaring traditions and contemporary environmental challenges; exhibits illuminating the history of maple sugaring in Vermont, cooking with maple, and Vermont women’s contributions to the maple industry; a reception; and the public launch of the website itself. Campus and community audiences were categorized and sub-divided for the purposes of targeted outreach. Campus targets included: relevant student clubs; students in the environmentally-focused GreenHouse residential learning community; Growing Vermont (a cooperative student-run business featuring local products); faculty members with curricular overlap; the Vermont Food Systems Collaborative; and the Center for Research on Vermont. Community targets included: maple producers; farmers; chefs, critics, and food bloggers; local food enthusiasts; environmentalists, educators, high school students, and the general public. Goals of the Maple Week communications strategy were: •to direct people to the Maple Research Website •to secure attendance at Maple Week events •to ensure consistent branding •to promote the diversity of collections and services available at the Libraries, through the example of maple research resources •to bring together constituents who often function separately, thus highlighting the Libraries’ role as both a campus and community resource Measurable objectives included: •media placement about Maple Week and the Maple Research Website •attendance at Maple Week events •participation in the Maple Cook-Off (e.g. the numbers and range of entries and attendees; the quality of entries; the caliber of judges and other participants) •Maple Research Website and Center for Digital Initiatives site traffic As a result of our distributed, team-based approach, we needed a robust tool for project management and internal communications. Basecamp, a software product already in use by the CDI, was used to set milestones, create collaborative documents, track feedback on plans, and manage to-do lists. External communications strategies were varied and included collaboration with University of Vermont Communications; press release distribution; traditional print publicity such as posters, postcards, and direct mailings; in-person outreach; aggressive and targeted email/listserv campaigns; a television appearance; promotion on library and campus websites; and the use of social media. A detailed publicity plan, outlining communication action steps and responsibilities, was incorporated into Basecamp. MAPLE WEEK BUDGET CASH IN-KIND Maple Cook-Off $886.80 Elizabeth Berman [75 hours] $2,115.75 John Elder Event $100 Selene Colburn [60 hours] $1,877.40 Exhibits $62.00 Prudence Doherty [50 hours] $1,420.00 Reception $100.83 Robin Katz [34 hours] $919.36 Publicity $172.68 Additional Personnel [8 hours] $117.36 In-House Printing and Mailing $423.90 Donated Prizes $150.00 Sub-Total $1,322.31 Sub-Total $7,023.73 TOTAL $8,346.04 !
  • 13. ! ! ! GOALS & OBJECTIVES ! ! ! ! !!! ! GOALS ! ! • to direct people to the Maple ! Research Website • to secure attendance at Maple Week events • to ensure consistent branding • to promote the diversity of collections and services available at the Libraries, through the example of maple research resources • to bring together constituents who often function separately, thus highlighting the Libraries’ OBJECTIVES role as both a campus and community resource •!"#$%&!'(&)#"#*+!&,-.+! ! /&'(#!0##1!&*$!+2#!/&'(#! 3#4#&5)2!0#,4%+#! ! •!&++#*$&*)#!&+!/&'(#!0##1! #6#*+4! ! • !'&5+%)%'&+%-*!%*!+2#!/&'(#! 7--189::!;#<=<!+2#!*.",#54! &*$!5&*=#!-:!#*+5%#4!&*$! &++#*$##4>!+2#!?.&(%+@!-:! #*+5%#4>!+2#!)&(%,#5!-:! A.$=#4!&*$!-+2#5! '&5+%)%'&*+4B! ! • !/&'(#!3#4#&5)2!0#,4%+#! &*$!7#*+#5!:-5!C%=%+&(! D*%+%&+%6#4!4%+#!+5&::%)! !
  • 14. ! ! ! TARGET AUDIENCES ! ! ! ! CAMPUS AUDIENCES !!! ! • ! Growing Vermont, a cooperative student-run ! ! business featuring local products; • The Vermont Food Systems Research Collaborative, a project of UVM’s Center for Rural Studies that exists to join on-campus and off-campus organizations in efforts to further food system research; • The Center for Research on Vermont, an interdisciplinary network of scholars and community members who share information, ideas, and research on Vermont; • Relevant academic departments including Plant Biology, Geology, Rural Studies, Vermont Studies, Geography, Environmental Studies, Nutrition & Food Sciences, and Plant & Soil Science; and • Approximately twenty relevant student groups, including the Vermont Student Environmental Program, Common Ground (student-run farm), Horticulture Club, Campus Kitchens, Feel Good, Dairy Club, Old Time Music Club, Slow Food VT – UVM, Gluten-Free Club, and the Society of American Foresters. COMMUNITY AUDIENCES • Maple producers (Chittenden County members of Vermont Maple Sugar Maker’s Association); • Farmers (Burlington Farmers’ Market vendors, and farmers associated with organizations such as the Vermont Fresh Network, the Northeast Organic Farming Association and the Center for an Agricultural Economy); • Chefs and restaurateurs (including all Chittenden County listings in the local Seven Nights dining guide with email contact information); • Food critics and bloggers (including food writers at the Burlington Free Press, SevenDays, Vermont Life, Edible Green Mountains, and Local Banquet); • Local food enthusiasts (including Community Supported Agriculture program members and localvore clubs, including Green Drinks and Slow Food Vermont); • Environmentalists; • Educators (including regional representatives of Educational Service Agencies); • High school students; and • General public. !
  • 15. ! ! ! COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES & TOOLS ! ! ! ! A detailed publicity plan was created and shared as a writeboard on Basecamp, so all team !!!! members could edit and improve on it. When the plan was finalized, tasks were turned into ! ! trackable to-do items in the program. ! BASECAMP Basecamp, by 37signals, is an online project management tool. It allows for teams to easily communicate, share files, create to-do lists and assign tasks, create milestones, and collaborate on documents. The CDI had a Premimum account, which the Maple Week Committee was able to use to coordinate the promotion and planning for the Maple Research Website Launch.
  • 16. ! ! ! BUDGET ! ! ! ! While the! cash budget for Maple Week was relatively low, the in-kind contributions were !!! ! significant. If anything, personnel time estimates are on the conservative side. In-kind ! ! ! ! contributions account for 84% of the final budget, and the bulk of these are faculty and staff time. We learned that a lot can be done with a very small budget, but only if people are ! powering the effort. ! CASH Maple Cook-Off: books [prizes] $49.27 Maple Cook-Off: musicians $225.00 Maple Cook-Off: Davis Center [space rental] $292.50 Maple Cook-Off: Davis Center [misc. expenses] $16.88 Maple Cook-Off: food and décor $235.88 Cash deposit for books $67.27 John Elder Event: honorarium $100 Reception: refreshments $100.83 Exhibits: Vermont maple giveaways $62.00 Publicity: postcard printing expenses $172.68 Cash Sub-Total $1,322.31 IN-KIND Personnel: Elizabeth Berman [75 hours] $2,115.75 Personnel: Selene Colburn [60 hours] $1,877.40 Personnel: Prudence Doherty [50 hours] $1,420.00 Personnel: Robin Katz [34 hours] $919.36 Personnel: Sharon Thayer [4 hours] $78.36 Personnel: Ana Banu [4 hours] $39.00 Publicity: 200 color 11x17 posters $50.00 Publicity: 200 color 8!x11 posters $30.00 Publicity: 300 misc. black & white printing $30.00 Publicity: 50 color Maple Cook-Off entry signs $7.50 Publicity: 400 color Special Collections printing $60.00 Publicity: Special Collections mailing $232.00 Publicity: Mailing to maple producers $14.40 Donated Prizes $150.00 In-Kind Sub-Total $7,023.73 TOTAL $8,346.04
  • 17. ! ! ! IMPLEMENTATION ! ! ! ! The ambitious planning strategy included both general and targeted outreach across a variety of media. !!! ! Press releases describing individual events and the week as a whole were sent to approximately 75 local ! media contacts. Print postcards and posters created to advertise Maple Week were distributed throughout ! ! the local community by volunteer members of the library faculty and staff, and on campus by a student worker. Targeted audiences received mailed invitations to John Elder’s talk and the Maple Week reception, including 500 friends of Special Collections. Blog postings about individual events and the website launch were featured prominently on the library homepage, and were distributed via the Libraries’ Facebook and Twitter accounts, as well as by individual library subject liaisons. Maple producers across the state were holding open houses the weekend of the Maple Cook-Off and we sent participating producers a letter about the Maple Research Website and Maple Week, and asked them to share promotional postcards with visitors. We attended the Burlington Winter Farmers’ Market and shared postcards with vendors and attendees; multiple vendors agreed to share postcards throughout the day. The website and Maple Week events were featured on an episode of Across the Fence, a local television program that is the longest-running daily farm and home television program in the country and that has an estimated daily audience of 25,000 viewers. A robust email outreach effort formed a big part of our strategy. We sent email notices to maple producers, multiple local foods groups and non-profits, Front Porch Forums (a local neighborhood-based community organizing listserv, http://frontporchforum.com/), educator networks, community-supported agriculture programs, organic farming organizations, food bloggers and critics, and scores of local restaurants. Student and faculty networks targeted on campus included multiple academic departments, individual faculty members, residential learning programs, interdisciplinary centers, and about twenty student groups ranging from the Horticultural Club to the Food Salvage Club. This was a low-cost and effective way to efficiently reach prospective audiences. Campus and community partners recruited for participation in the Maple Cook-Off also helped recruit attendees . These partners included: popular local restaurants which donated pizes and judges Suzanne Podhaizer (food critic for Burlington’s alternative weekly paper), Sue Bette (owner of the Bluebird Tavern, a James Beard-nominated restaurant), Sarah Lyons (a maple producer), and Kate Turcotte (undergraduate majoring in ecological agriculture). We also worked with students from the GreenHouse residential learning community who gave a maple taste-testing based on the sediment of nearby soils; representatives of Growing Vermont, a student-run business featuring local products; and Island Homemade Ice Cream, who heard about the event and asked to distribute free samples of their new maple-bacon ice cream. The Maple Week activities and targeted promotional campaign were designed to showcase the Maple Research Website and to draw attention to the unique special collections; promotion of the website’s URL was a consistent element in promotional materials and at the actual event. Posters and postcards were designed in-house and featured elements of the Libraries’ recent branding efforts, such as our logo and official fonts, while creating a distinctive and elegant look and feel for Maple Week. These design elements then carried over into other materials, such as Maple Cook-Off registration forms and exhibit signage.
  • 18. ! ! ! PRESS RELEASE ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! For immediate release March 11, 2010 Contact: Selene Colburn, 802.656.9980, Selene.Colburn@uvm.edu Maple Madness: A Week of Celebration at the UVM Libraries The University of Vermont Libraries are celebrating the creation of a new Maple Syrup Research Website (http://library.uvm.edu/maple) with a week of programs, exhibits, and food, beginning March 28th, 2010. A Maple Cook-Off will be held at UVM’s Davis Center on March 28th, from 4 to 6PM, featuring a buffet of maple delicacies, music by acoustic trio The Growlers, maple displays, children’s activities, and prizes of gift certificates to local eateries (awarded by food critics, activists, and producers). The event is free and open to the public. For more information or to register: http://maplecookoff.eventbrite.com John Elder, a Professor at Middlebury College, will present “A Party in the Woods: Sugaring, Community, and Celebration Under a Changing Sky,” on maple sugaring as a traditional rural lifeway that both illuminates contemporary challenges like climate change and exemplifies the need for celebration within environmental thinking today. The talk will take place in Bailey/Howe Library’s Special Collections on March 31st, at 5:30 PM, and is co-sponsored by Special Collections and the UVM Libraries. Elder’s talk will follow a 4:30 PM reception to celebrate the launch of the Maple Syrup Research Website in the Bailey/Howe Library lobby. Maple exhibits in the Bailey/Howe Library are based on materials selected from the Wilbur Collection of Vermontiana, the Maple History Collection, and the collections of UVM’s Proctor Maple Research Center. The featured exhibits (“It’s Always Maple Time in Vermont,” “Sweet and Savory: Cooking with Maple,” and “Women’s Contributions to Maple”) include images of sugaring-off parties, historic recipes, the story of Helen Nearing, and much, much more. The exhibits are located in the Bailey/Howe Library Lobby and in Special Collections. They will be on display through June 2010. This Maple Syrup Research Website (http://library.uvm.edu/maple) is a comprehensive subject guide in the field of maple syrup, touching on all aspects of maple syrup and sugar maples: maple syrup history, collection and production, marketing, nutrition and recipes, sugar maple cultivation, environmental issues and pests and diseases. This website also includes historical publications and photographs related to maple syrup research at the University of Vermont. This project is a collaboration between the UVM Libraries, the Department of Special Collections, the Center for Digital Initiatives, and the Proctor Maple Research Center, with support from UVM Extension, the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, and the Center for Research on Vermont. It was funded in part by the Agriculture Network Information Center (AgNIC), in partnership with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the National Agriculture Library. For more information, please call 802-656-9980 or e-mail selene.colburn@uvm.edu See the Bailey/Howe Library on a campus map: http://www.uvm.edu/map/?Page=MAP&Building=51 Information on visitor parking at UVM: http://www.uvm.edu/tps/parking/?Page=visitors.html Press release distributed in collaboration with University Communications to over 75 regional press contacts at print, radio, and television outlets.
  •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• %3,!>'9.$!<%0),*%!?,*%,(!#*!@A6!&'5+0$B! • (,1,9'*%!'&'),5.&!),+'(%5,*%$B! • $%0),*%!&,*%,($!'$!*,'(/2!<'.*%!6.&3',1$!?#11,4,!'*)!?3'5+1'.*!?#11,4,B! • '%!$,(9.&,!+#.*%$!'*)!/.11/#'()$!%3(#043#0%!%3,!@A6!C./('(.,$B! • &'5+0$!/.11/#'()$B! • $%0),*%!)#(5.%#(.,$B! • 1#&'1!:##)!$%#(,$!'*)!/0$.*,$$,$B! • 1#&'1!3.43!$&3##1$B! • &#::,,!$3#+$B!'*)! • %3,!D0(1.*4%#*!7.*%,(!E'(5,($F!6'(8,%;! !
  • 20.
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  • 24. ! ! ! LIBRARY WEBSITE BLOGS ! ! ! ! Blog postings about individual events, the website launch and the digital collections were featured !!! ! prominently on the library’s homepage and the CDI’s homepage in the weeks leading up to Maple Week. ! !
  • 25. ! ! ! LIBRARY WEBSITE BLOGS ! ! ! ! !!! ! ! !
  • 26. ! ! ! CDI BLOG: “THE MARCH SUGARMAKING TRADITION” ! ! ! ! !!! ! ! !
  • 27. ! ! ! EMAIL AS AN OUTREACH TOOL ! ! ! ! Email figured prominently in our promotion plan. It was a great way to target very diverse audiences with consistent ! messages, and to direct them to online actions they could ! take, such as registering for the Cook-Off or visiting the ! Maple Research Website. Following mass emailing on March ! 17th, we saw a spike in traffic to the Center for Digital ! Initiatives Maple Collections. ! Our email strategy sought to get the message in the hands of individuals who would redistribute it to their own networks (e.g. presidents of student clubs, academic department administrators, coordinators of local food clubs, and representatives of educational service agencies), thus maximizing return from our efforts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`$:&!7.3-,-'S+! F%&;.,*!?$**&;2.$/+!$/!6,-;#!aO+2L!,2!bIaN!W6L!,/D!.+!;$R+%$/+$-&D!3'!F%&;.,*!?$**&;2.$/+!,/D!2#&!456! 7.3-,-.&+=!! !!! *D&-S+!2,*9!:.**!0$**$:!,!UIaN!W6!-&;&%2.$/!2$!;&*&3-,2&!2#&!*,(/;#!$0!2#&!6,%*&!F'-(%!G&+&,-;#! 8&3+.2&!./!2#&!_,.*&'J`$:&!7.3-,-'!*$33'=!! !!! !"#$%&=>54143)!! !!! 6,%*&!&M#.3.2+!./!2#&!_,.*&'J`$:&!7.3-,-'!./;*(D&!.1,C&+!$0!+(C,-./CR$00!%,-2.&+L!#.+2$-.;!-&;.%&+L!2#&! +2$-'!$0!`&*&/!c&,-./CL!,/D!1(;#L!1(;#!1$-&=!!>#&!&M#.3.2+!,-&!*$;,2&D!./!2#&!_,.*&'J`$:&!7.3-,-'! 7$33'!,/D!./!F%&;.,*!?$**&;2.$/+=!!>#&'!:.**!3&!$/!D.+%*,'!2#-$(C#![(/&!ANON=!! !!! !.2%&?(/.2@"34.(!! !!! Z$-!1$-&!./0$-1,2.$/L!%*&,+&!;,**!BNARVbVRddBN!$-!&R1,.*!+&*&/&=;$*3(-/e(<1=&D(! ! F&&!2#&!_,.*&'J`$:&!7.3-,-'!$/!,!;,1%(+!1,%I!#22%IJJ:::=(<1=&D(J1,%JfW,C&g6QWh_(.*D./CgbO!! !!! Recipientsincluded: localvore clubs, Chittenden County restaurants, Community-Supported Agriculture "/0$-1,2.$/!$/!<.+.2$-!%,-9./C!,2!456I!#22%IJJ:::=(<1=&D(J2%+J%,-9./CJfW,C&g<.+.2$-+=#21*! (CSA) programs, agricultural non-profits, neighborhood community organizing forums, maple producers, ! local educators, UVM academic departments and programs, and student clubs. !
  • 28. ! ! ! TARGETING PRODUCERS: MAPLE OPEN HOUSES ! ! ! ! One of our most effective strategies was to target local maple and !!! ! agricultural producers. ! ! Maple producers across the state were holding open houses the ! weekend of the Maple Cook-Off and we sent approximately thirty participating Chittenden County producers a letter about the Maple ! Research Website and Maple Week, and asked to share promotional ! postcards with visitors. ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
  • 29. ! ! ! TARGETING PRODUCERS: WINTER FARMERS’ MARKET ! ! ! ! !!! ! Selene Colburn visited the Winter Farmers’ Market ! ! and approached each vendor, leaving postcards for ! them to share with visitors to their stalls. A number ! of vendors featured maple baked goods, or maple syrup, and were eager to hear more about Maple ! Week. Many of the vendors had already heard about ! the programming, via other networks, and agreed to ! help promote it. ! Burlington is a relatively small town and the team member, a native Burlingtonian, was able to ! effectively promote the Maple Cook-Off to a number ! of shoppers and acquaintances. ! ! ! !
  • 30. ! ! ! “ACROSS THE FENCE” TELEVISION APPEARANCE ! “Across the Fence” is the longest-running daily farm and home television program in the country. On March 25, 2010, science librarian Elizabeth Berman appeared on the episode “UVM Libraries: Research and !!! Records on Maple Sugaring in Vermont,” to promote the Maple Research Website, the digital maple ! collections and Maple Week events. The show has an estimated daily audience of 25,000 viewers in the greater Burlington area. Watch the video online at: http://vimeo.com/12059071 SAMPLE SCRIPT Intro... Maple syrup. Everyone loves it. Vermont is the largest producer of maple syrup in the U.S., accounting for approximately 35% of all U.S. maple production and distribution (7% of the world’s maple syrup supply). At the University of Vermont, basic and applied maple research began in the early 1890s and continues its strong tradition today. The Proctor Maple Research Center, established in 1946, is an Agricultural Extension Field Research Station of UVM and has published seminal maple research in areas such as: sap and syrup production, maple physiology and genetics, forest ecology and health, and sap and syrup chemistry… We have with us today Elizabeth Berman, UVM’s Science & Engineering Librarian and project manager for the development of this maple syrup website. Welcome…
  • 31. ! ! ! SOCIAL MEDIA The UVM Libraries !!! ! promoted the Maple Week events and the Maple ! Cook-Off using the social media tools Facebook and Twitter. The UVM Libraries Facebook profile has 232 friends; the UVM_Libraries Twitter account has 559 followers.
  • 32. ! ! ! SPECIAL COLLECTIONS EXHIBITS ! ! ! ! Special Collections contributed to the Maple Madness promotion with exhibits in the Bailey/Howe Library’s three exhibit venues. At each exhibit location, we promoted the Maple Research Website and Maple Week events. Design elements used in the exhibit were derived from the maple website template. Because we know that library patrons and visitors often look at only a portion of an exhibit, we decided to tell three different stories, each with sections and items that could easily be viewed and appreciated individually. Each exhibit contained some items now available in the ! Center for Digital Initiative’s Maple Research and Maple Recipe ! Collections. The largest venue contained material about maple sugar and syrup production through time, with a focus on Vermont producers, inventors, and researchers. One section highlighted the social aspects of sugaring season, foreshadowing the Maple Week lecture and Maple Cook-Off. In addition to the traditional Special Collections exhibit materials (photos, ephemera, maps, books, manuscripts, etc.), this exhibit included artifacts from the Proctor Maple Research Center. In an alcove near the main entrance, maple cookbooks and recipes from the Vermont Cookbook Collection were displayed in “Sweet and Savory: Cooking with Maple,” to generate interest in and provide inspiration for the Maple Cook-Off. Takeaway items available at this exhibit included postcards for Maple Week, copies of the Official Vermont Maple Cook Book obtained from the Vermont Maple Foundation, and copies of the “Vermont Ski Resort and Year-Round Maple Syrup Guide,” published by Vermont Department of Tourism and Marketing and the Vermont Sugar Maker’s Association. The display cases in Special Collections featured the accomplishments of women in the Vermont maple industry, including the Maple Grove candymakers, back-to-the-lander and maple entrepreneur Helen Nearing, and UVM scientist Mariafranca Morselli. A slideshow of the entire exhibit can be viewed on Flickr at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/askmapleuvm.
  • 33. ! ! ! EXHIBIT: IT’S ALWAYS MAPLE TIME IN VERMONT ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Selected images from the “It’s Always Maple Time in Vermont” Special Collections exhibit. “In the month of March, when the sun has taken a little strength and as the trees enter into sap, they, the Indians, make with their hatchets transverse incisions in the trunk of the trees, from which trickles in abundance a water which they receive in large receptacles of bark. They afterwards cause this water to boil over the fire, which consumes all the watery matter, and which thickens the rest into the consistency of syrup, or even into cakes of sugar, according to the degree of heat to which they subject it.…” Joseph-Francois Lafitau Joseph-Francois Joseph-Francois LafitauLafitau, a French Jesuit priest who traveled among ! the Iroquois from 1712-1717 recorded his observations about maple production in his Moeurs des sauvages americains compares aux moeurs des premiers temps (1724). According to Lafitau, the French learned to make syrup and sugar from the Indians. Lafitau’s 1724 book includes a European engraver’s illustration of the Indians gathering sap and making syrup or sugar. !
  • 34. ! ! ! EXHIBIT: IT’S ALWAYS MAPLE TIME IN VERMONT ! ! ! ! Maple sugaring was a standard subject for many of the stereoscopic series that ! documented life and work in the northern United States. These views were produced ca. 1869 by the Kilburn Brothers of northern New Hampshire. ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! “I learn that you deal largely in maple sugar and syrup. If so I would like to ! engage all you have this year at a fair MAPLE EQUIPMENT INDUSTRY market price. I want to get 10 tons per ! week to ship to New York City. How much of that amount could you furnish? The invention of the tin can during the Civil War helped ! initiate the maple equipment industry. With the ! availability of sheet metal, specialized companies emerged to manufacture maple equipment, which had previously been made by general metal workers. Vermonters patented and produced spouts, buckets, evaporators, cans, and other equipment. Some prominent Vermont firms included A.H. Soule (St. Albans), Leader Evaporator (Enosburg Falls, 1888), G.H. Grimm Mfg. Co. (Hudson, Ohio and Rutland, Vermont), and Vermont Farm Machinery (Bellows Falls, 1868). During the second half of the twentieth century, technological advances such as plastic tubing, vacuum pumps and reverse osmosis systems resulted in much more efficient sap gathering and syrup production.! !
  • 35. ! ! ! EXHIBIT: IT’S ALWAYS MAPLE TIME IN VERMONT ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! RESEARCH AND SUPPORT ! Vermont’s maple industry has been supported through basic and applied research at the University of Vermont’s Agricultural Extension Service and Proctor Maple Research Center. C.H. Jones began research on maple chemistry and physiology after coming to UVM in 1896. UVM researchers James Marvin, Fred Taylor, Fred Laing, Mariafranca Morselli, among many others, conducted research that has greatly helped maple producers in Vermont, the northeastern United States, and Canada. In 1888, members of the Vermont Grange organized the Vermont Maple Sugar Exchange to ensure strictly pure Vermont maple products and promote maple consumption. The Vermont Sugar Makers Association, founded in 1893, continues to advocate for the maple industry and its producers. Through an active branding program, the VMSMA promotes and protects the highest quality Vermont maple products. To inform producers, VMSMA holds maple schools throughout the state.
  • 36. ! ! ! EXHIBIT: IT’S ALWAYS MAPLE TIME IN VERMONT ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
  • 37. ! ! ! EXHIBIT: VERMONT WOMEN CONTRIBUTE TO MAPLE ! ! ! ! ! THE BUSINESS ! WOMEN ! OF MAPLE GROVE ! ! ! ! HELEN NEARING, ! SUGARMAKER AND PROMOTER ! ! ! ! ! ! MARIAFRANCA MORSELLI, SCIENTIST
  • 38. ! ! ! EXHIBIT: SWEET AND SAVORY, COOKING WITH MAPLE ! ! ! ! Maple production may be an important part of Vermont’s agricultural ! economy, but for most of us, maple is about food. ! The Bailey/Howe Libraries Vermont Cookbook Collection documents ! the richly varied and creative maple dishes that home cooks and professional chefs make to delight family members and restaurant ! guests. ! The sample of cookbooks and recipes displayed here range from an 1888 ! promotional publication to a 2009 cookbook that celebrates fresh interpretations using Vermont ingredients. There are recipes for ! dishes that are well-loved and familiar, such as Beatrice Vaughan’s ! Maple Bars, as well as those that are unusual and intriguing, such as Edith Foulds’ Black-Peppered Maple Cream Pie. Despite maple’s ! expense, cooks appreciate its unique flavor and local origin, and it continues to make an important contribution to Vermont’s evolving ! culinary landscape. ! ! !
  • 39. ! ! ! MAPLE COOK-OFF ! ! ! ! On Sunday, March 28, from 4-6pm, the University of !!! ! Vermont Libraries hosted the “Maple Cook-Off” at the ! Davis Student Center. Registration for the event was ! handled by the free event-hosting website, Eventbrite; the !!! interface was easy to use and allowed for easy customization, allowing us to add information about the judges and prizes, as well as the rules of the competition. Registration for the event was free and open to the public. 27 competitors entered dishes, with 16 Sweet entries and 11 Savory entries. Entrants were required to incorporate 100% pure maple syrup or sugar into their recipes, and were asked to bring at least two dozen tastings of their dish for judges and attendees to enjoy. Community members did not need to enter a dish in order to attend. The doors opened at 4pm, with The Growlers, an energetic acoustic trio, providing musical entertainment. There were several additional activities for attendees, including: • Students from the Green House, the environmental residential community on campus, hosting a maple tasting where they presented several different types of maple syrups they made alongside Log Cabin Syrup. They provided information about different production techniques and how terroir (the “taste of place”) affects maple syrup. • Growing Vermont, a student-run store, set-up a booth where they were able to sell locally produced maple related products, including maple edibles (cotton candy, popcorn, and candies and maple hardwood frames, ornaments and decorations. • Island Ice Cream, a local ice cream manufacturer, gave out free tastings of their maple bacon and maple walnut ice creams. • Maple trivia cards were placed on every table, highlighting facts and interesting information and directing people to the Maple Research Website. • A children’s table, with coloring activities and maple-related children’s books. Judging was based on simple evaluation criteria: 25% (5 points) for appearance, 50% (10 points) for taste, and 25% (5 points) for use of maple. Prizes were awarded at the end of the event, with winners being selected in five categories: Best Sweet Dish, Best Savory Dish, Best Overall Use of Maple, Best Traditional Maple Dish, and Best Complete Meal. JUDGES The Maple Week committee was very hands-on in The Maple Cook-Off recruited a number of impressive judges: organizing and implementing the Maple Cook-Off. The • Suzanne Podhaizer, food critic for SevenDays, event coordinator at UVM Conference and Events helped Burlington’s alternative weekly newspaper; secure a venue and basic amenities, including tables and • Sue Bette, owner of Bluebird Tavern, a James Beard- chairs, but the set-up and decoration was done by the nominated restaurant; committee and a number of library staff volunteers. • Sarah Lyons, maple producer, Square Deal Farms; and Elizabeth Berman served as emcee of the event, while • Kate Turcotte, ecological agriculture major and other staff ran the check-in booth, coordinated the maple organizer of the Vermont Food Summit. buffet, and assisted the judges.
  • 40. ! ! ! MAPLE COOK-OFF: ACTIVITIES ! ! ! ! !!! ! ! GreenHouse syrup tasting; Growing Vermont ! ! The Growlers; Island Ice Maple Cook-Off at
  • 41. ! ! ! MAPLE COOK-OFF: ENTRIES ! ! ! ! !!! ! ! PRIZES ! A number of local eateries donated ! $150 worth of prizes, including: • Magnolia Bistro • Penny Cluse Café • August First Bakery • Hen of the Wood • Shelburne Farms, 2 copies of “Cooking with Shelburne Farms” cookbook
  • 42. ! ! ! MAPLE COOK-OFF: WINNING RECIPES ! ! ! ! ! Maple Beef Explosion – Best Savory Dish Maple Pulled Pork –Best “Complete Meal” Maple Cheesecake Bar – Best Sweet Dish
  • 43. ! ! ! RECEPTION & SPECIAL COLLECTIONS LECTURE ! ! ! RECEPTION A reception was thrown to celebrate the launch of the Maple Research Website, and to thank the numerous individuals and groups who had made the project possible. The reception was held in the Bailey/Howe Library H. Lawrence McCrorey Gallery. Over 30 guests sampled maple-themed hors d’oeuvres, including maple samosas, balsamic-maple salmon on toast, and maple cream tarts. ! ! ! A PARTY IN THE WOODS: SUGARING, COMMUNITY, AND CELEBRATION UNDER A CHANGING SKY Following a reception to celebrate the Maple Syrup Research Website, John Elder, Professor of English and Environmental Studies at Middlebury College, presented “A Party in the Woods: Sugaring, Community, and Celebration Under a Changing Sky.” The public talk was co-sponsored by the UVM Libraries and the Department of Special Collections. Elder, an accomplished writer and professor whose work marries literature and environmental studies, discussed maple sugaring as a traditional rural lifeway that both illuminates contemporary challenges, like climate change, and exemplifies the need for celebration within environmental thinking today. In the talk, Elder wove together and reflected upon excerpts from his book-in- progress, In Hardwood Groves.
  • 44. ! ! ! UVM LIBRARIES & MAPLE WEEK BRANDING ! ! ! ! In 2007 and 2008, the UVM Libraries Communications Team engaged in branding activities resulting in the !!! ! creation of a logo and tagline, designed by the Scoula Group (a local graphic design firm) with significant input! from Libraries faculty and staff, library users, and University administration. Many adaptations of the ! logo were created for individual libraries and for various uses (e.g. black and white, vertical orientation, on a ! dark background, etc.). With the Communications Team, the Scoula Group designed templates for common in-house publications, such as temporary signage, informational handouts, special reports, newsletters, brochures, and power point presentations, incorporating the logo and associated design elements. Standard fonts and color palettes now serve as the basis for in-house print and electronic designs. While there is still a learning curve “on-the-ground” for how strictly to adhere to guidelines for individual publications, the overall structure has resulted in more consistent and effective library communications. Maple Week branding laudably took these guidelines as a starting point and incorporated the Libraries logo and prescribed fonts. In-house design of posters and flyers, postcards, and Maple Cook-Off registration materials provided elegant and immediately recognizable messaging about the programming – especially useful in tying together multiple related collections and events. Exhibit design echoed the look and feel of the Maple Research Website and a Special Collections mailing proved more consistent with departmental branding. One of the things we learned from the collaborative cross-departmental approach was to work toward even more consistent branding and future efforts building on the Maple Week model, such as promotions for CDI’s KakeWalk at UVM collection, incorporated that feedback. VARIATIONS ON THE UVM LIBRARIES’ LOGO Trade Gothic LT Std Bold CenturyStd-Book APPROVED FONTS SAMPLE MAPLE WEEK PROMOTIONAL MATERIAL
  • 45. ! ! ! EVALUATION! ! ! ! !!! Approximately 150 people attended the Maple Cook-Off and 27 dishes ! were entered into the competition. According to our Maple Cook-Off ! ! evaluation, our promotional strategy was effective and efficient: ! nearly half of the respondents heard about the event through word of ! mouth, while an additional 20% heard about it through our posters and postcards. Press coverage, emails, and social networking also ! resulted in Cook-Off attendance, demonstrating the effectiveness of ! multiple approaches. ! The event drew in a diverse crowd, attracting students and faculty, ! local chefs and food enthusiasts, and maple producers and community members. In the evaluation, a number of attendees commented on the ! strength of the cook-off as a “community event,” bridging the various ! constituents we had hoped to target. The quality of the event was ! highly rated by attendees, with comments praising the maple tasting, ! the music, the maple trivia, and above all else the variety and quality of the food entries. ! Approximately 50 individuals attended John Elder’s lecture on the relationship between maple sugaring ! traditions and the environment (typical Special Collections events average anywhere from 25 to 50 people). The individuals in attendance drew from campus and community populations not traditionally in attendance ! at Friends of Special Collections events, indicating a successful outreach strategy. ! The reception celebrating the website’s launch was attended by approximately 30 individuals, including the ! Dean of the Libraries, the Dean of Extension, the Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, the ! Director of Proctor Maple Research Center, and the Director of the Center for Research on Vermont, as well ! as a number of faculty and maple producers. ! Exhibit viewership is difficult to measure, but appeared to be high, based on the numbers of individuals who helped themselves to accompanying take-aways; over a hundred copies of a free maple cookbook disappeared ! during the course of the exhibit. ! Since! its launch in March, the Maple Research Website averages 350 monthly visitors; in the month following Maple Week and the promotional events, there were over 800 visitors, suggesting a successful ! promotional strategy incorporating the website’s URL. The Center for Digital Initiatives maple collections, ! also launched in March, average about 250 visitors a month, but saw a significant peak in the weeks leading up to !Maple Events. On March 18th, there were 387 visits in a single day, likely a result of mass emailings to targeted listservs on March 17th. ! The week of programming and promotion, in particular the Maple Cook- ! ! The Maple successful at directing campus and campus and local publications. Most notably, two local television crews came and Off, was Week press release appeared in a number of community users to the filmed !a segment of the Maple Cook-Off, which aired as part of the evening news. A local food blogger wrote a post about the event and Maple Research Website and at positioning the UVM Libraries as the participants shared details of their experience via social networking sites such as Facebook. essential resource for maple related information. The collaborative and ! wide-ranging approach to promoting related programming and resources was a first (in scope, if not in theory) for the UVM Libraries and now serves as a model for future efforts. The CDI has already incorporated this model and used it to promote events related to the launch of their KakeWalk at UVM collection in the fall of 2010. One of the biggest lessons we learned is to tie programs even more directly to related resources by providing handouts, following up with emails when possible, and driving home the action step of visiting the website at live events.
  • 46. ! ! ! WEBSITE USAGE STATISTICS ! ! ! ! ! Included are website analytics for the Maple Research Website and the CDI Maple Research Collection and Maple Recipes Collection, and the AskMaple reference service statistics. ! MAPLE RESEARCH WEBSITE & ASKMAPLE REFERENCE SERVICE Statistics from March 1, 2010 to December 1, 2010 MONTH VISITS ASKMAPLE March 381 5 April 801 5 May 334 0 June 339 0 July 105 2 August 101 4 September 167 2 October 248 2 November 379 3 TOTAL 2,855 23 CDI COLLECTIONS Statistics from March 1, 2010 to December 1, 2010 MONTH PAGE VIEWS March 820 April 508 May 317 June 231 July 486 August 207 September 408 October 546 November 437 TOTAL 3,960