LIVERMORE — The Washburn-Norlands Living History Center will host a pancake breakfast and maple-sugaring demonstration on Maine Maple Sunday, March 27.

The events run from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 290 Norlands Road.

A hearty breakfast of fresh hot pancakes and sausage drizzled in Norlands’ own maple syrup will be served the farmer’s cottage. At the Sap House there will be boiling demonstrations.

A working team of oxen, a one-room schoolhouse display and walks and snowshoeing on the fields and wooded carriage trails of the 445-acre national historic site will also be offered. There is a gift shop also.

The breakfast cost is $5 to $7; other events are free. No reservations are necessary.

FMI: 207-897-4366, norlands@norlands.org, www.norlands.org.

The Washburn-Norlands Living History Center is a multifaceted museum offering in-depth experiences in 19th-century rural life. Its mission is to preserve the heritage and traditions of rural life in Maine’s past, to celebrate the achievements of Livermore’s Washburn family, and to use living history methods to make values, activities and issues of the past relevant to present and future generations.