
Originally Posted by
blissville maples
I I'm not sure of your elevation and general area but I can say this I see a lot of people with a couple thousand tabs tapping late January or early February like it take them three weeks to set up.
Why jeopardize not having a nice fresh tap hole when the good runs come in March? Especially when it only takes, for most producers less than 4000 taps, a week's time on average to tap. I tap 3500 taps and in about a week by myself I have my tapping done, leaks all found and fixed so.....
I don't know about everybody else but these little warm spells we've been having and we'll have again this week do nothing for sap flow. I've done the January tapping, had perfect days with temperatures in the low 40s and I'm stomping the ground saying where's the sap!!! Well it's not sap season that's why there's no sap!!- can anybody relate?
Very few runs in January in early February are going to produce a gallon of sap per tap, and furthermore probably not going to have the sugar content of a good march run.
I know I make my maple syrup with sugar not water.
It's hard but try to refrain patience is a virtue.
Yes ... even in South Western Connecticut at 300' MSL I can relate. Although I have made some gorgeous stuff in late January and early February in recent years. We actually had ideal taping weather in December this year. And I was tempted.
But this year my 5/16 bit is still in the box.
A tap may last 6 weeks ... it may last 7 weeks ... it may last 8 weeks ... it may last 9 weeks ... it may last 10 weeks ... it may not last any weeks.
Dorthy used to say in the wizard of oz ... "Their is no place like home"
As sugar makers we all need to remember ... no matter how much we know ... and how good we think are clever taps are ... "Their is no place like a fresh tap"
I have had a set of buckets out for 2 weeks from March 1 to March 14 outperform big time in total sap output, another set of buckets that were out from January 25th to March 31.
And I mean big time.
After 4 seasons of tapping early ( somewhere between Jan 25 - Feb 5 ) and averaging about 10 boils per year for the season, I would say it is best to avoid early tapping if one can avoid it.
While we get some good early season sap flow in this region, early tapping, even at my location, contradicts the natural and evolutionary design of the maple forest.
For those that can re-tap, have at it, although I do not recommend it.
If you think it's easy to make good money in maple syrup .... then your obviously good at stealing somebody's Maple Syrup.
Favorite Tree: Sugar Maple
Most Hated Animal: Sap Sucker
Most Loved Animal: Devon Rex Cat
Favorite Kingpin: Bruce Bascom
40 Sugar Maple Taps ... 23 in CT and 17 in NY .... 29 on gravity tubing and 11 on 5G buckets ... 2019 Totals 508 gallons of sap, 7 boils, 11.4 gallons of syrup.
1 Girlfriend that gives away all my syrup to her friends.