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Thread: Do your tree's have a nickname?

  1. #11
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    Nov 2008
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    Howell, mi
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    Quote Originally Posted by mountainvan View Post
    Tweegs, that's funny. You chasing the squirrels up the trees to get the altitude?
    Chasing them?
    No, not really.
    It’s more a function of trajectory, arc and velocity.

    Imagine trying to get a side tie on your mainline banjo string tight, and you happen to slip a split second before securing said side tie.


    Now, if I happen to meet a squirrel on the way up…or down…well, I figure that’s just making good use of my time.
    42.67N 84.02W


    350 taps- 300 on vacuum, 50 buckets
    JD gator 625i Sap hauler w/65 gal tank
    Leader 2X6 drop flue

    Homemade auto draw-off
    Homemade preheater
    Homebrew RO, 2- xle-4040's
    LaPierre double vertical releaser
    Kinney KC-8 vacuum pump

    12X24 shack
    Lots of chickens and a few cats.

  2. #12
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    Aug 2013
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    WNY
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    Only three have names.

    -Bertha. A +/-28 inch DBH sugar in my front yard that outflows all other trees 2:1. I didn't get a sap hydrometer in time last year to check, so it may be low sugar. But dang, it just keeps flowing! I remember climbing that tree as a child.

    -Rascal. A tree in my backyard and is a 15 year old reference to an old dog. My house is actually my grandparents old place, the original farmhouse on the farm. Our fat and lazy black lab growing up was called rascal. He was chained to that tree one day when he was a bit younger and more ambitious. We saw him jump up, grab a small branch, and pull it down. He peeled off a 3 inch wide section of bark a good 2-3 feet down the tree. Thus, it's called Rascal. Funny thing is I think I remember my grandfather planting that tree when I was like 5. As a matter of fact, all the trees in my yard were planted by him. Some back in the early 60s.

    -Nate's tree. Last year my then 4 year old was adamant that this one particular tree got tapped and a bag hung on it. I only put out 40 taps in the woods last year, so I focused all on trees at the edge of the woods. Combination of southern exposure, larger crowns, and shorter walking. I didn't really want to tap that tree as it was 20-30 ft in the woods across a stone pile. Of course, that was probably the best producing tree out in the woods last year.

  3. #13
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    Feb 2016
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    Burnsville, NC
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    Great idea. Today we just named the spots so we could know what trees we are talking about . Maple Rock, near a large rock, mountain top, last one up the mt., sunrise perch, next to Papas house, and fencepost. We don't have many trees, but they all are sapping bigtime.

  4. #14
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    Feb 2009
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    Altamont, NY
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    Just one tree. We call it "The Ent" from Lord Of The Rings. The thing is huge and looks like it would uproot and walk off. I didn't tap it my first two years. Put two taps in it each year and thank it when I put them in and when I pull them. Thank god nobody is around when I tap, they'll start looking for a home for me!
    Leader WSE 2x6 w/hoods
    12"x20" Mason Finisher
    250 taps.. Majority on tubing
    14'x20' sugarshack
    Kubota RTV900XT
    Home built Auto Drawoff
    Leader MicRO 2 RO
    www.mallardpondmaple.com

  5. #15
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    Sep 2010
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    Vermont
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    I have a very large maple tree named OLD Faithful. The tree is always running during the season. The sap test at 4%.

    Spud

  6. #16
    Join Date
    May 2009
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    UVM Proctor Maple Research Center, Underhill Ctr, VT
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sinzibuckwud View Post
    Just wondering if anybody else had nicknames for tree's that they tap?
    Not a lot of names, but we do have trees with numbers.

    With some of the trees on chambers I did name a few...."SuperTree" was one of my favorites, and usually the reason I had to go check and drain chambers. It always had almost double the amount of everyone else. It had what I think were a few sisters nearby, as they would usually run a fair amount better than the others. Then there was "Mr. Stingy", a large tree that some years would be OK, and other years would be terrible....probably due to internal compartmentalization.

    We do name sections of our woods....some after manufacturers "Leader", "CDL", etc., some after installers "Corey", "Goodrich", some after researchers "Williams", "Morselli", "Taylor" and then some that have weird origins "Red Series" and "Martin Block". In each of those sections every mainline is numbered....and each mainline is equipped with a Smartrek vacuum sensor at the end of the line. Makes it very easy to find leaks and describe the location of other issues that need attention.
    Dr. Tim Perkins
    UVM Proctor Maple Research Ctr
    http://www.uvm.edu/~pmrc
    https://mapleresearch.org
    Timothy.Perkins@uvm.edu

  7. #17
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    Feb 2011
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    Temperance Mi
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    We have named 2, Big Bertha And Speedy Gonzales. Both are great running trees with high sugar content.

  8. #18
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    Mar 2006
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    Lanark, ON
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    We have too many to name individual trees but we refer to sections of mainlines by letter (A-line, B, D, E, F etc...). This dates back to when all our mainlines came down each year and we used an alpha-numberic system to describe the section of the bush (mainline) followed by the number for where the line was relative to the start of the mainline. Some lines stick in your head - like C14 because it was a huge tree at the one end of a hill, and some because the hill was so steep you wanted to make sure you didn't grab that line from the pile when you were having to take them out to the head tree to stretch them!
    5,000 Taps on vacuum
    9,400 gallons storage
    3 tower CDL RO
    3.5'x14' Lapierre Force 5
    10" CDL Wesfab Filter Press
    Twitter & Instagram: @ennismaple
    www.ennismaple.com

  9. #19
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    Mar 2012
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    North Grenville
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    I only have six trees so easy to remember them. They share the tree lines with other trees that I don't tap, i.e. #3, #4 and #7 are all reds, and #8 is standing dead and actually is nicknamed Stick as there are no limbs left on it. Combine #s with names so trees are: #1 is Onederful, #2 is Two-two Train, #5 is Five Alive, #6 Six Machine, #9 is Minor Niner. And now that I have found a lovely 2-spiler sugar in the back woods behind myself, all on its own, I've not given it a #, just a name: Surprise!
    Been tapping since 2008.
    2018 - 17 taps/7 trees...819l sap, approx 28l syrup
    2019 - 18 taps/8 trees...585l sap, 28l syrup...21:1 ratio
    2020 - 18 taps/8 trees...890.04l sap...gave away about 170l, 30l snafu'd....23l total for me from approx 690l
    2021 - 18 taps/8 trees...395l sap, 12 l syrup
    2022 - 18 taps/8 trees....7 sugars 1 red due to #2 having surgery so had the season off....582l sap, 18.5l syrup
    2023 - 18 taps/8 trees...all sugars again. 807l sap, so far approx 14l syrup

  10. #20
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    Jan 2011
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    Southern Ohio
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    Using buckets and bags I know how each tree runs. I only have a name for three of them and I call them the slut sisters, because they put out when none of the others do and more than any others. I wish i had a whole woods of them. I had one I should have called the ICE B*tch because it would run big for about three runs then go completely dry, the wind took her down last year and now I'm burning her to cook sap.

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