FoolsHumor
03-01-2009, 12:52 PM
Greetings,
Could someone tolerate a beginner’s questions? Twenty five years ago I bought a farm and within a month had bought taps from the local hardware store. Problem is I never did anything with them until a couple of weeks ago. This past summer the Lady of the House decided we should tap some trees and make syrup for Christmas gifts. So I cruised the edge of the woods while the leaves were on and I gave my best shot at identifying and marking some sugar maples. So now we move to three weeks ago. I tapped 4 trees and very quickly had 12 gallons of sap. Enough to do a test run before investing time and money in a more serious system. Using a large aluminum backing pan, an old Coleman 2 burner camp stove and a gallon of fresh fuel I boiled sap for 7 hours and finally got down to where I had little enough volume to finish it inside the house. Problem is my 12 gallons turned into less than 20 ounces of unfinished syrup. Figures out to about an 80:1 ratio. Long ways from the 32 to 40 the books claim. My syrup seemed to taste correct, I think. So, the questions are……
(1) Are the 32:1 ratio’s just for sugar maples in the New England climate? Most books seem to relate to that area.
(2) Have I tapped something other than sugar maples? I tasted the raw sap and it was not at all sweet.
(3) When the sap is filling a couple of gallon jugs a day from a single tap is the sugar content below the magic 3%?
(4) What else have I missed?
Any and all help is appreciated.
Regards,
Bob in Greene County Indiana
Could someone tolerate a beginner’s questions? Twenty five years ago I bought a farm and within a month had bought taps from the local hardware store. Problem is I never did anything with them until a couple of weeks ago. This past summer the Lady of the House decided we should tap some trees and make syrup for Christmas gifts. So I cruised the edge of the woods while the leaves were on and I gave my best shot at identifying and marking some sugar maples. So now we move to three weeks ago. I tapped 4 trees and very quickly had 12 gallons of sap. Enough to do a test run before investing time and money in a more serious system. Using a large aluminum backing pan, an old Coleman 2 burner camp stove and a gallon of fresh fuel I boiled sap for 7 hours and finally got down to where I had little enough volume to finish it inside the house. Problem is my 12 gallons turned into less than 20 ounces of unfinished syrup. Figures out to about an 80:1 ratio. Long ways from the 32 to 40 the books claim. My syrup seemed to taste correct, I think. So, the questions are……
(1) Are the 32:1 ratio’s just for sugar maples in the New England climate? Most books seem to relate to that area.
(2) Have I tapped something other than sugar maples? I tasted the raw sap and it was not at all sweet.
(3) When the sap is filling a couple of gallon jugs a day from a single tap is the sugar content below the magic 3%?
(4) What else have I missed?
Any and all help is appreciated.
Regards,
Bob in Greene County Indiana