Lazarus
02-15-2011, 05:00 PM
I’m having a big problem with my trees I’m hoping someone may have some suggestions. I’ve got a mix of silver and sugars. Despite decent weather, my silvers are producing next to nothing – it some cases not even a drop. They are tapped with a mix of 5/16 and 7/16, collection with with sap saks. The sugars are running strong. Based on my past experience with these same trees (which are massive yard trees 3-4 feet in diameter) they were producing nearly 2 gallons per tap per day last year with similar weather. I thought maybe they were still frozen, but we’ve had good weather swings here is SW Ohio, below freezing at night and into the 40’s in the daytime, even a big warm-up to 55 degrees one day. The ground is thawed and squishy.
Aside from the big ones I tapped last year, I also tapped about 80 new silvers in the woods about a half mile away, with similar results. These trees are in a low creek bed with limited sun, and in many cases their feet are in a few inches of water in a shallow creek, which runs only when it’s wet out. I also thought they were frozen at first because of all the water they sit in, but the creek is running well, and the ground is soft. I’m getting nothing from them. Even on the 55 degree day, I got maybe a half inch in the bucket. I tapped another massive silver across the road in a low-lying area, and another in a friend’s front yard 20 miles away. Same problem.
I tapped as long as three weeks ago (which was a bit too early as the weather turned unseasonably cold), but I would not think the holes could have prematurely closed in that time? Do I just need to be patient? The sugars have been strong for a week or more. Last year by this time some of these silvers were far outperforming the sugars.
Any thoughts here?
-Lazarus
_______________________
Thomas Ireland Smith Farm
Itty bitty cottage producer
150 taps (producing like 20!), mostly silvers
GBM 2x6
Aside from the big ones I tapped last year, I also tapped about 80 new silvers in the woods about a half mile away, with similar results. These trees are in a low creek bed with limited sun, and in many cases their feet are in a few inches of water in a shallow creek, which runs only when it’s wet out. I also thought they were frozen at first because of all the water they sit in, but the creek is running well, and the ground is soft. I’m getting nothing from them. Even on the 55 degree day, I got maybe a half inch in the bucket. I tapped another massive silver across the road in a low-lying area, and another in a friend’s front yard 20 miles away. Same problem.
I tapped as long as three weeks ago (which was a bit too early as the weather turned unseasonably cold), but I would not think the holes could have prematurely closed in that time? Do I just need to be patient? The sugars have been strong for a week or more. Last year by this time some of these silvers were far outperforming the sugars.
Any thoughts here?
-Lazarus
_______________________
Thomas Ireland Smith Farm
Itty bitty cottage producer
150 taps (producing like 20!), mostly silvers
GBM 2x6