Frank Ivy
02-20-2010, 04:01 PM
Noted this morning that it was sunny and above freezing, so I tapped. First time tapping for tubing and first time tapping with professional stuff (i.e. not milk jugs and sumac spiles.
Question 1 - The end of my tubing line has a run from a very small tree (just tappable) for 30 or so feet to a two tapper tree. That run is almost horizontal - just about a 4-5 inch drop in total. Any problem there? I tapped the end tree up about 10 feet just to get that drop. Should I take it out, or will sap flow and not cause issues?
I BRIXed a bunch of trees.
The six sugars that I tapped and put line on were all about 1.7%. They were all in a wooded area on a hill facing south, all with neighbors. I was disappointed with that number.
Then I tapped a Sugar and a Red that are in the field, with no neighbors. Got 3% on the sugar and 2% on the Red.
So I got curious, and I checked a bunch of other reds.
Interestingly - 4 or 5 in the field, no neighbors - 2%.
Really big, old Red in the woods with the tubed sugars - no sap on north side, 1% on south side.
Medium Red in the woods with the tapped sugars 1%.
Question 2 - is there a correlation between sugar content and having/not having neighbors?
Thanks to the good doctor for suggesting that I get a refractometer and thanks to him as well for suggesting I might tap the reds. Thank you Tim. I entered this forum a newb with the bias that reds were not suitable for tapping. Had I not come here, it may not have occurred to me to have tested them.
The math is simple, right? I have to boil off 48 gallons to get a gallon of sap at 2%, and 32 gallons at 3%.
I'd be better off in some ways tapping the reds out in the field than the sugars in the woods, it seems.
Question 1 - The end of my tubing line has a run from a very small tree (just tappable) for 30 or so feet to a two tapper tree. That run is almost horizontal - just about a 4-5 inch drop in total. Any problem there? I tapped the end tree up about 10 feet just to get that drop. Should I take it out, or will sap flow and not cause issues?
I BRIXed a bunch of trees.
The six sugars that I tapped and put line on were all about 1.7%. They were all in a wooded area on a hill facing south, all with neighbors. I was disappointed with that number.
Then I tapped a Sugar and a Red that are in the field, with no neighbors. Got 3% on the sugar and 2% on the Red.
So I got curious, and I checked a bunch of other reds.
Interestingly - 4 or 5 in the field, no neighbors - 2%.
Really big, old Red in the woods with the tubed sugars - no sap on north side, 1% on south side.
Medium Red in the woods with the tapped sugars 1%.
Question 2 - is there a correlation between sugar content and having/not having neighbors?
Thanks to the good doctor for suggesting that I get a refractometer and thanks to him as well for suggesting I might tap the reds. Thank you Tim. I entered this forum a newb with the bias that reds were not suitable for tapping. Had I not come here, it may not have occurred to me to have tested them.
The math is simple, right? I have to boil off 48 gallons to get a gallon of sap at 2%, and 32 gallons at 3%.
I'd be better off in some ways tapping the reds out in the field than the sugars in the woods, it seems.