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Thread: How much sap do you use to rinse a tubing system?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2012
    Location
    Northfield, VT
    Posts
    35

    Default How much sap do you use to rinse a tubing system?

    Hello everyone,

    I understand that the first sap from a tubing system is wasted to the ground to remove last year's crud, but how much? My 181 CV2 taps are on 2500' of gravity 5/16" tubing, divided evenly into 2 systems. About 2/3 of the total was used in 2014, the rest is new for this year. I have 10% slope and am hoping to get some gravity induced vacuum. The total volume of 2500' of 5/16" is 10 gallons (no mainline). I'm thinking of triple rinsing, i.e. 15 gallons of sap from each system, before starting to collect in my sap tank. I've found lots of great information on this discussion site, but no specifics on this question. Does anyone have any opinions on the quantity of sap used to rinse out a tubing system? I've heard 'first day' but - good day? bad day? In my case I have a reasonably accurate measure of my collection system volume and would rather not waste more than necessary.

    Gerold
    Northfield, VT
    Last edited by Geroldn; 03-05-2015 at 12:06 PM. Reason: added more details

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2013
    Location
    Lisbon, NH
    Posts
    385

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    A couple of people I have asked let the first day go on the ground.
    Pete Nightingale
    Lisbon, NH

    3 Teenage sap haulers & Plenty of friends and family to restock the beer fridge
    2012 1 tap and a pot
    2013 10 taps, oil tank evap, 2 gallons of slightly too thin syrup
    2014 48 taps improved oil tank evap 3.5 gallons, ouch??
    2015 88 taps 78 5/16" and 10 3/16" nat vac 40"x 48" Homemade Arch 13.25 Gallons
    2016 100 taps 65 on 3/16 & 35 buckets 17 gallons + unknown amount of maple / Jack Daniels testers

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Vermont
    Posts
    2,242

    Default

    When I turn on my pumps I let all the snot run into the tank and that might be 100 gallons at best. I will dump all that out and then start keeping the rest. One days run for me could be 6000-12,000 gallons so there is no way I would want or need to dump all that. If your running gravity into your tank just clamp a sock at the end of the pipe for the first few hours the sap starts to run.

    Spud

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Adirondacks
    Posts
    2,786

    Default

    Iwas questioning the same thing. Think I will just watch it. I filter my sap directly from the line but will still let the first few hours of a decent run go
    FIRST GENERATION SUGARMAKER
    First boil 2/22/2012! Went Pefect!
    3,500' of laterals
    1,000' of mainline
    2012 - 105 taps on gravity, 12 sap sacks.
    2013 - 175 taps on gravity, 25 on sacks = 200 taps for 2013! Second year.
    2014 - 250 taps on gravity, 25 on sacks
    Tapped on February 16, 2014
    2015 - adding vac sap puller no more gravity for me!
    275 gallon holding tank for 2014
    20'x30' Sugarhouse

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Location
    Hoosick Falls
    Posts
    2,000

    Default

    For our operation we just watch the lines. When the sap in the releaser, which is glass, looks nice and clear and I will sample it and when it tastes good we close the valve. On a good run day that can be as little as a couple of hours. We do wash the lines in the past with Clorox so when the smell was gone was an easy indicator...now on peroxide solution so there is no taste or smell to that.

    In the past if we had a nasty main that had stuff in it we would fill a tank of water and suck it thru the main that had an issue and flush it out and wait a few minutes. Less sap wasted this way.

    When she looks good and tastes good close the valve.

    Ben

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Newfane, VT
    Posts
    323

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    We run high pressure air & water through the lines at the end of every season and haven't ever had to dump any sap at the start of the season.
    300 on vaccum
    300 gravity tubing
    200 buckets

    100 hilltop acres
    16x20 timberframe sugarhouse built in 2010
    3x10 Leader max flue & revolution pans w/ Inferno arch - 2013
    1998 Kubota M5400

    Northwoods Farm and Forestry on Facebook.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Lanark, ON
    Posts
    2,392

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    We'll run the pumps for a few hours, dump the crud that comes in, clean the tank and start keeping the clean sap.
    4,600 Taps on vacuum
    9,400 gallons storage
    3 tower CDL RO
    3.5'x14' Lapierre Force 5
    Twitter & Instagram: @ennismaple
    www.ennismaple.com

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Dec 2012
    Location
    Northfield, VT
    Posts
    35

    Default How much sap to waste cleaning the lines - upadate

    On March 5 I asked how much sap to waste to clean out my lines. The online consensus and from another sugar maker I know at work, is to let it flow to the ground until it looks good and tastes good. As of Monday, March 9 I collected about 2 gallons total from both tubing systems, into 5g buckets. Sap was dripping about 1 drop/sec out of each line (90 taps/line). No visible crud, but it still tastes bad - onto the ground it went. The trees dripped a little bit over the weekend, but I think most of what I collected is a result of adjusting lines and shaking out residual, spoiled sap that was in the lines from last season. Tuesday I had 7 gallons and dumped it. Wednesday March 11, I dumped another couple gallons before I was satisfied with the sap I was collecting and started letting it run to the tank. Total dumped was about 12 gallons spread over 7 days to finally get to good sap. Basically rinsed my tubing with one collection system volume of sap. Now its cold and windy, no more sap for several days.
    Last edited by Geroldn; 03-12-2015 at 06:14 AM.

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