Early each day before the rest of
his family awoke, Chief Woksis would get up, pick up a birch bark pail from
under the large tree near where they slept and walk to the river to draw a
heavy pail of fresh water for the family for the day. He put the pail back
under the tree where his wife would find it when she awoke and picked up his
tomahawk and headed off to hunt. He thought, "Maybe today I will catch a
large deer to feed my family."Chief
Woksis came back at the end of the day and his wife said, "What did you
catch for our supper?" He had to tell her the hunt did not go well and he
had nothing to offer them. His wife cooked up some root vegetables in the
water and that was all they had to eat.
The next day Chief Woksis got the pail again,
walked to the river, returned it full under the tree, grabbed his tomahawk
and headed off to hunt. He thought, "Maybe today I will catch a large deer
to feed my family."
Chief Woksis came back at the end of the day and
his wife said, "What did you catch for our supper?" He had to tell her the
hunt had not gone well and he again, had nothing to offer them. His wife
cooked up some greens in the water and that was all they had to eat.
The next day Chief Woksis got the pail, walked
to the river, returned it full, grabbed his tomahawk and headed off to
hunt. He thought, "Maybe today I will catch a large deer to feed my
family."
Chief Woksis came back at the end of the day and
his wife said, "What did you catch for our supper?" Frustrated he told her
the hunt had not gone well and again he had nothing to offer him. Angry
that he could not find something to feed his now very hungry family, he
threw his tomahawk into the side of the large tree and went to bed. His
wife told the children there was nothing to eat.
The next morning Chief Woksis woke up very early
and moved noiselessly about. He removed his tomahawk from the tree and went
hunting determined to find food for his hungry family. The spirits were
looking kindly on him this warm spring day and he caught a large, fat deer.
Excitedly he ran home carrying the deer which felt as light as a feather and
handed it to his wife for cooking. She cut up the meat and cooked it using
the pail of water from under the tree. Excitedly everyone started eating to
fill their empty stomachs..
Chief Woksis said, "How did you cook this meat?
It is different. It tastes sweet."
His wife answered, "I cooked it as I always do,
in the full pail of water from the river you brought me this morning."
Chief Woksis jumped up and exclaimed, "Oh, No!
I was in such a hurry to get out early and find food for my family, I never
filled the pail today."
Curious, the chief and his wife went to the tree
and realized that right above where the pail always sat was the cut in the
tree from where he had thrown his tomahawk the night before. From the gash
there was a watery looking liquid dripping which must have filled the pail.
They put out the tips of their fingers and caught a drop and tasted it to
find out it was a sweet tasting sap that flowed. The sap from the Maple
Sugar tree was what was in their pail, not water!

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