Sinoed09
01-30-2022, 01:37 PM
I bought a farm last spring that has a beautiful old growth sugar bush of 50-60 trees planted probably 70 years ago. All of them are absolutely huge and I was eyeing them last summer to try tapping. I ordered all my tubing and planned on running my lines in the fall. Unfortunately, life happened and I wasn't able to get them up before the snow started to fly. The sugar bush is located on top of a ridge on my farm and the line has a grade of 10% so gravity feed is not a problem.
The tricky part is that I have a section about 300' long that crosses a field used as pasture for cattle during the summer where there are no trees to string it up. Yesterday, I put on an antique pair of snowshoes and hiked down the escarpment with my tubing and for now I just rolled this section out on the ground. I'd like to do maybe one more run to have two separate lines going along this path.
Since the ground is frozen and I don't have trees what is the risk of leaving it rolled out on the ground? Will it get chewed to bits by squirrels and rodents? Will it freeze solid and wreck my sap plans? Or do I have to figure out some system of tripods or something to support the line?
Any suggestions? :confused:
The tricky part is that I have a section about 300' long that crosses a field used as pasture for cattle during the summer where there are no trees to string it up. Yesterday, I put on an antique pair of snowshoes and hiked down the escarpment with my tubing and for now I just rolled this section out on the ground. I'd like to do maybe one more run to have two separate lines going along this path.
Since the ground is frozen and I don't have trees what is the risk of leaving it rolled out on the ground? Will it get chewed to bits by squirrels and rodents? Will it freeze solid and wreck my sap plans? Or do I have to figure out some system of tripods or something to support the line?
Any suggestions? :confused: