A guest comes to the sugarhouse at Greyfox Farm
The sap is running a little today, I boiled off a few buckets of ice so I'm ready for the sap tsunami that I think is coming this weekend...hopefully. In the mean time, here's a few shorts clips from the past couple of weeks, when we had a visitor.
Our guest arrives
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIjUgQ5VwcA
His welcome
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A47U6uZTt5o
His new home
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yMaGW8cKxE
Hydrofracing maples. it seemed like a good idea at the time.....
Everyone knows that a vaccum applied to a tap will enhance sap flow, so I thought that perhaps some positive pressure, strategically applied, might have an advantage as well. You see I tapped early this season and here at the tail end of the season my sap flow has been low. I thought that if I were to give a short, sharp, shock UP the tree perhaps I could break free one last good run.
I went to my town library and came across a textbook from the 1940's called "The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives" and read up on some energetic materials that might be of some use. With this new-found knowledge I went to my local chemical supplier and spoke with a particularly agitated and surly fellow who kept muttering things like "crackpot", "B.A.T.F", and "Homeland Security." After giving him seven forms of ID I took my raw materials back to the sugarhouse and cooked up a batch of "wake-up juice."
First of all, let me explain that the metric system has always been confusing to me. I assumed that the notation "ml" meant "metric liters", not "milliliters", so the batch of product that I cooked up was about three orders of magnitude on large side. This became apparent to me shortly. Undaunted, I packed the tubing with my home made nitro and let her rip.
My memory of the next several hours is rather fuzzy. On the one hand there were a few positive results:
1) Next year my lines should flow quite freely. My 5/16" tubing now averages approximately 3" in diamiter , although there are rather a lot of holes and burned spots.
2) I saved many laborious hours of tap pulling as the pressure wave passing through the lines at 4000 meters per second popped off all the taps at once.
The down side is that the experiment didn't help the sap flow. It seems that the cellular structure of the maples channeled the pressure wave up to the tip of the branches and blew all the buds off the trees, resulting in a red carpet of buds in my sugarwoods about 2" thick. You can see it from Google earth, just look for the two acre red circle surrounded by the yellow tape which reads "police line, do not cross."
And just a reminder, remember today's date....April Fools......
Doc