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    Gallery: After a year off, Maine Maple Sunday weekend has a triumphant first day back - Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal | of | Share this photo

    Kash Malmsten points to a helicopter in the sky Saturday as he sits on a rock with his parents, Brittany and Kale, at Pep's Pure Maple Syrup in Sabattus. His brother Payson, second from left, and sister Maddison are too busy devouring their maple syrup glazed and drenched doughnuts. The visit to their old friends who operate the sugar shack is a yearly tradition for the family from Winthrop.

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    Gallery: After a year off, Maine Maple Sunday weekend has a triumphant first day back - Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal | of | Share this photo

    Talby Edgecomb looks out the window Saturday at Pep's Pure Maple Syrup in Sabattus as she waits for customers during the annual Maple Sunday Weekend. She is the fourth generation of the family operated business and when not serving customers, or sampling the sweet treats, she is chief line inspector where she and her assistant, her 4-year-old brother Tipton, check for leaks and blockages in the miles of lines that string from tree to tree collecting sap.

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    Gallery: After a year off, Maine Maple Sunday weekend has a triumphant first day back - Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal | of | Share this photo

    Kash Malmsten tries to get his mom, Brittany Malmsten, to keep pouring more maple syrup onto his doughnut Saturday at Pep's Pure Maple Syrup in Sabattus. His brother Payson, middle, is busy devouring his. It is a yearly tradition for the Winthrop family to visit Pep's on Maple Sunday Weekend.

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    Gallery: After a year off, Maine Maple Sunday weekend has a triumphant first day back - Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal | of | Share this photo

    Talby Edgecomb looks out the window Saturday at Pep's Pure Maple Syrup in Sabattus as she waits for customers during the annual Maple Sunday Weekend. She is the fourth generation of the family operated business and when not serving customers, or sampling the sweet treats, she is chief line inspector where she and her assistant, 4-year-old brother Tipton, check for leaks and blockages in the miles of lines that string from tree to tree collecting sap.

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