Yooper906
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2020
- Messages
- 289
Was running here last week. Cold temps moved in and shut them down. Early March (March 10) is usually go time around here.
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Was running here last week. Cold temps moved in and shut them down. Early March (March 10) is usually go time around here.
Dang! You’re way ahead of us.We are a few weeks ahead for sure but it’s been 40 during the day and freezing at night so the temps have been perfect. I’m thinking the sugar content is not going to be very high because we never had the prolonged cold snap this year. Silver maples are already budding out along the river.
My family has been doing syrup for almost 100 years now. My grandpa said it was a fools mistake to have mother nature make you think you can tap before March 1st. Normally he is right - those people that tap early based on a late January or February warm up end up tapping too early, the cold returns and completely locks up your taps resulting in you have to retap and end up further damaging the tree.We are a few weeks ahead for sure but it’s been 40 during the day and freezing at night so the temps have been perfect. I’m thinking the sugar content is not going to be very high because we never had the prolonged cold snap this year. Silver maples are already budding out along the river.
Yeah, I started out with turkey fryer. Never again.I helped my FIL tap a bunch of walnut trees. We did about 80. That is some of the finest dark syrup I’ve had. Holy smokes does it clean me out tho.
It was a lot of work. We were rookies and used deep pots and propane in the garage. It took so much propane to cook it down. Then it was putting so much moisture into the shed that it started molding the drywall. We made a contraption using reverse osmosis to pull a lot of water out and then used cookie sheets to cook the rest out.
Yeah, I started out with turkey fryer. Never again.
My wife and I were just talking last night about earlier preparation for next year. RO is something I want to invest in/learn, seems like it’s a no brainer to save fuel/time. The only problem is the sugar bush does not have electricity, so that is going to complicate things. We could do solar, but that will make things pricey.
Did you make your own RO or buy one?I can see power being an issue. I know we were able to cut propane use by about 75%
We had a plumber who worked a trade with us for some oak lumber we cut down. I know he built most of it.Did you make your own RO or buy one?
I wonder if you could get enough solar panels from goal zero or a similar company to just run the RO. That probably would not take that much juice or break the bank.Yeah, I started out with turkey fryer. Never again.
My wife and I were just talking last night about earlier preparation for next year. RO is something I want to invest in/learn, seems like it’s a no brainer to save fuel/time. The only problem is the sugar bush does not have electricity, so that is going to complicate things. We could do solar, but that will make things pricey.
Yeah, I’d have to look more into that. I know a generator would work, but I don’t really want to have that going all the time.I wonder if you could get enough solar panels from goal zero or a similar company to just run the RO. That probably would not take that much juice or break the bank.
That’s sounds awesome! I’ll have to give that a tryMy dad used to make a few gallons each spring. I've done it a bit on my own and at a farm I worked for. Fun, social process and you've never had a real hard-boiled egg until you've had one that was boiled in boiled-down sap!
Excellent snack when you're hanging out with the evaporator for hours!That’s sounds awesome! I’ll have to give that a try