Don(MI)
01-03-2011, 09:27 PM
Hey all! Just checking in to this awesome site!
Small time family outfit here, we make syrup just for ourselfs and enjoy this hobby we all love! My great-grandfather used to make syrup in a cast iron kettle way back in the day, and my grandfather continued that with his family. We still make maple syrup, with a small 5 acre soft maple woods. Just around 200 taps, nothing to technical about it. We gather with our Allis Chalmers "G" tractor and 120 gallon bulk tank, then pump this into the 150 gallon milk tank you see in the pictures. This gravity feeds around the smoke stack, as a pre-heat coil, and dumps into a stainless 4x5' flat pan. And you guys know the rest from there! The arch, my father and I made about 10 years ago, the building was actually a local high schools wooden baseball dugouts. They built new cyinder block dugouts, and my uncle got ahold of the old wood ones, works great as a sugar bush!
I will say this, growing up doing this every spring since I was about 6 years old, has been one of the best experiences of my life! I am now 25, and still look forward to every spring, with the same excitment!
Have a good one! Don
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v50/Fuldraw/100_2505.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v50/Fuldraw/Sugar%20Shack/100_0999.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v50/Fuldraw/Sugar%20Shack/100_0979.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v50/Fuldraw/Sugar%20Shack/100_0984.jpg
Dad headed out after a woodchuck.
Small time family outfit here, we make syrup just for ourselfs and enjoy this hobby we all love! My great-grandfather used to make syrup in a cast iron kettle way back in the day, and my grandfather continued that with his family. We still make maple syrup, with a small 5 acre soft maple woods. Just around 200 taps, nothing to technical about it. We gather with our Allis Chalmers "G" tractor and 120 gallon bulk tank, then pump this into the 150 gallon milk tank you see in the pictures. This gravity feeds around the smoke stack, as a pre-heat coil, and dumps into a stainless 4x5' flat pan. And you guys know the rest from there! The arch, my father and I made about 10 years ago, the building was actually a local high schools wooden baseball dugouts. They built new cyinder block dugouts, and my uncle got ahold of the old wood ones, works great as a sugar bush!
I will say this, growing up doing this every spring since I was about 6 years old, has been one of the best experiences of my life! I am now 25, and still look forward to every spring, with the same excitment!
Have a good one! Don
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v50/Fuldraw/100_2505.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v50/Fuldraw/Sugar%20Shack/100_0999.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v50/Fuldraw/Sugar%20Shack/100_0979.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v50/Fuldraw/Sugar%20Shack/100_0984.jpg
Dad headed out after a woodchuck.