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Thread: Backyard Syrup Enthusiasts 2023

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2020
    Location
    Southern Maine
    Posts
    44

    Default Backyard Syrup Enthusiasts 2023

    I know, it's not even 2023 yet, but thought I would kick it off as I started tapping today. Several things at play for me down in Southern Maine:
    • New Maple gear as Christmas present
    • Big thaw and rain over New Years
    • Warm January predictions
    • Need to wrap up sugaring by early/mid march for family reasons
    • General impatience

    So this will be a bit of an experiment: We'll see if my tap holes will last me into early March!
    2023 - 40-ish taps (25-30 “effective” ones), tapped mostly in New Year’s Eve. 5 gallons of syrup.
    2022 - 70 taps - 12 gallons of syrup
    2021 - 72 taps ~ 8 gallons of syrup
    2020 - 8 taps on droplines into buckets, stove top boil, < 1 gallon syrup

    A neighborhood consortium of red maple trees, a renegade group of neighborhood kids emptying 5 gallon buckets, a homemade RO, a 3 pan cinderblock evaporator near the street, and 1 very patient wife

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2016
    Location
    Mount Vernon Maine
    Posts
    223

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    Good luck! I look forward to what your experience is with an early season. I was discussing pros and cons of January tapping with my wife earlier today as it sure felt like March. In fact I think the warm weather made me curious if anyone was on Mapletrader.

    I'm particularly curious as to your sugar content and how well the trees run versus how well they typically run in similar temperatures. I have a theory that the trees "know" it is January and hold back for spring----perhaps due to a lower sun angle? Love to follow your experience.

    What did Santa bring you?
    Two 2x4 concrete block arches with three steam trays each
    Tapping in Mount Vernon since 2016, 30 to 70 taps, 5/16" tube to 1.5 to 3.5 gallon buckets, some trees on collective gravity tubing to 5 gallon buckets.

    Mostly sugar maples, a few reds on 200 year old homestead

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2021
    Location
    Parry Sound Area, Ontario
    Posts
    1,348

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    Quote Originally Posted by Mvhomesteader View Post
    Good luck! I look forward to what your experience is with an early season. I was discussing pros and cons of January tapping with my wife earlier today as it sure felt like March. In fact I think the warm weather made me curious if anyone was on Mapletrader.

    I'm particularly curious as to your sugar content and how well the trees run versus how well they typically run in similar temperatures. I have a theory that the trees "know" it is January and hold back for spring----perhaps due to a lower sun angle? Love to follow your experience.

    What did Santa bring you?
    My sugar content in Northern Ontario today range from 2.5% to 3%.
    2022 - 5 pan block arch - 109 taps, 73 on 3/16 lines, 36 on drops into 5 gallon pails.
    930 gallons boiled, 109 L (28.8 gals) of delicious syrup made.
    DYI Vacuum Filter
    2023 - 170 taps, mostly on lines, 1153 gallons boiled, 130 L (34.34 gals) of delicious syrup made, on a 2x4 divided pan and base stack, 8” pipe, on a block arch that boiled at a rate of 13 gallons per hour.
    2024 - made 48 L, December to March, primarily over two fire bowls.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2016
    Location
    Mount Vernon Maine
    Posts
    223

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    Quote Originally Posted by Swingpure View Post
    My sugar content in Northern Ontario today range from 2.5% to 3%.
    Are you tapping as well? I would have guessed you'd be frozen fairly tight.
    Two 2x4 concrete block arches with three steam trays each
    Tapping in Mount Vernon since 2016, 30 to 70 taps, 5/16" tube to 1.5 to 3.5 gallon buckets, some trees on collective gravity tubing to 5 gallon buckets.

    Mostly sugar maples, a few reds on 200 year old homestead

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2020
    Location
    Southern Maine
    Posts
    44

    Default

    I got 1,000 feet of 5/16" tubing, T's, check-valve spouts, and a 2-handed tubing tool for christmas and I had a blast this past weekend putting up 3 lines with 5-7 trees on each. Learned a lot Not much sap from those trees yet as they're smaller and in the shaded woods, but I did another 10 trees (in sunnier locations) on drops into buckets, and got about 7 gallons of sap all together, boiled for an hour on my 3-pan block evaporator (Modifications: 3 vs 2 pans last year, swapped cinder block chimney for pipe stack, built more of an arch in the back to push heat up to pans, ceramic blanket insulation inside...) and made a pint of syrup last night. Brix was 1.5% for me, which is similar to the 2021 season as I'm all reds and I'm expecting this past summer's drought is going to hurt sugar content. More sap in the buckets when I just went outside today, I'm guessing the Gorham temperatures today and tomorrow will give me another 5-10 gallons.

    I'm interested to see how this turns out too, MV! A grand experiment for sure I've done some fall tapping in 2020 and 2021 on of a few trees so I can boil on Thanksgiving and Christmas as weather allows (usually inside on the stove), and I've been surprised that most of those trees were still giving sap into March. I'll tap the rest of the 40 trees around the neighborhood as more reliably warm weather peaks its head into the 14-day forecast.
    2023 - 40-ish taps (25-30 “effective” ones), tapped mostly in New Year’s Eve. 5 gallons of syrup.
    2022 - 70 taps - 12 gallons of syrup
    2021 - 72 taps ~ 8 gallons of syrup
    2020 - 8 taps on droplines into buckets, stove top boil, < 1 gallon syrup

    A neighborhood consortium of red maple trees, a renegade group of neighborhood kids emptying 5 gallon buckets, a homemade RO, a 3 pan cinderblock evaporator near the street, and 1 very patient wife

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2016
    Location
    Mount Vernon Maine
    Posts
    223

    Default

    Sounds like your having fun already, which is the ultimate goal (plus syrup of coarse). I experimented last season with some tubing, which went well, so I'll be using more this season. Saved time emptying buckets.

    I was wondering if the drought would affect the sugar. I hoped the wet fall would compensate, which maybe it did for sap quantity, but sugar production was probably over. I'm pretty sure that Dr.Tim once mentioned that the current ssc was based on what the tree experienced several years previous. If so, it was probably one of the other summer droughts we've had!

    In any case, I hope the weather is in your favor! Keep us posted!
    Two 2x4 concrete block arches with three steam trays each
    Tapping in Mount Vernon since 2016, 30 to 70 taps, 5/16" tube to 1.5 to 3.5 gallon buckets, some trees on collective gravity tubing to 5 gallon buckets.

    Mostly sugar maples, a few reds on 200 year old homestead

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2016
    Location
    Mount Vernon Maine
    Posts
    223

    Default

    February 2 again ---this year expecting a deep cold snap rather than a snow storm like last year.

    I'm giving serious consideration to tapping next week, which is probably a week or so ahead of when usually tap. The temperatures look pretty favorable to an early run, and since my season usually ends the first week of April I likely won't loose anything to healing tap holes. I'll decide Monday when I can see the two week forecast. If it's high 30's or better I will go for it.

    I haven't decided how many taps to do this year. I've still got 7 gallons left from last years' mega run, so technically I only need to tap enough to assure 7 gallons or so of new stock. I would probably be wise to overshoot.

    Any one else thinking of tapping??
    Two 2x4 concrete block arches with three steam trays each
    Tapping in Mount Vernon since 2016, 30 to 70 taps, 5/16" tube to 1.5 to 3.5 gallon buckets, some trees on collective gravity tubing to 5 gallon buckets.

    Mostly sugar maples, a few reds on 200 year old homestead

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2016
    Location
    Mount Vernon Maine
    Posts
    223

    Default

    I've decided to tap this weekend (11th and 12th) in anticipation of the 5 day in the 40's run beginning Monday. Since I've got 6 gallons+ left from last season I'll tap fewer trees this year, probably in the low 30's which should give me 10 ish gallons. I often tap at this time, so I'm really only a few days earlier than usual. I've cleared away all the snow from the east/south/West sides of the trees so the sun can warm the trunk, if that makes a difference. It's something to do to get ready.
    Two 2x4 concrete block arches with three steam trays each
    Tapping in Mount Vernon since 2016, 30 to 70 taps, 5/16" tube to 1.5 to 3.5 gallon buckets, some trees on collective gravity tubing to 5 gallon buckets.

    Mostly sugar maples, a few reds on 200 year old homestead

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2016
    Location
    Peru, Maine
    Posts
    1,113

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    Good luck! We're holding out until last week of February. We won't be ready until then anyway- too many other hobbies sucking up time in February Let us know how you make out.
    305 taps on 2 Shurflo's, 31 taps on 3/16" and 229 taps on gravity. 565 in all
    Mountain Maple S3 controller for 145 of the vacuum taps
    2x6 Darveau Mystique Oil Fired Evaporator w/ Smoky Lake Simplicity Auto Draw
    Wesfab 7” filter press

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Dec 2020
    Location
    Southern Maine
    Posts
    44

    Default

    I'm hoping to finishing tapping this weekend (~40 trees around the neighborhood), and boil from what I collect from the 40 taps I have on my property. I collected about 80 gallons in January after tapping New Year's eve, brix around 2% (all reds, some pretty puny crowns in there too). Been fun to get equipment work and repair the RO (ok that wasn't fun, but necessary!). WE'll see how long those early tap holes last, but at least I've got 40 freshies! I tapped about this time last year as well, MV.
    2023 - 40-ish taps (25-30 “effective” ones), tapped mostly in New Year’s Eve. 5 gallons of syrup.
    2022 - 70 taps - 12 gallons of syrup
    2021 - 72 taps ~ 8 gallons of syrup
    2020 - 8 taps on droplines into buckets, stove top boil, < 1 gallon syrup

    A neighborhood consortium of red maple trees, a renegade group of neighborhood kids emptying 5 gallon buckets, a homemade RO, a 3 pan cinderblock evaporator near the street, and 1 very patient wife

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