Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Tapping Maple Trees

Drilling a hole for the tap

After weeks of waiting for the sap to run, we had no choice but to go out and tap trees today.  The snow is very deep in the woods and getting around is difficult, as you sink in about 2 feet.  Sometimes you can walk on top for a step or two, only to sink 2 ft down on the next step!   But, if we want any maple syrup at all this year, we have to do it!  The daytime temps are above freezing (not by much) and freezing at night, and so that means the sap is running.   We tapped about 50 trees with much work this morning.  In a good year with little to no snow, we can tap about 200 trees.   We hope to tap more if the snow melts a little.   We need a good warm rain!  The photos below show the process of tapping.  We use stainless steel taps, and new clear heavy plastic bags that we fold into shape and hang via a grommet on a 3 inch screw.  At the end of the season we toss the bags, wash out the taps in boiling water and we're ready for next year.  Due to Harold's cancer, we were not able to make syrup the last 2 years, but he is feeling better now and so we are going to give it a try!   Some of the bags from yesterday are already almost full, so we will have to go the route again and dump the sap into our bulk tank for holding until we can boil on Wednesday.  Harold plans to make a type of sled to haul around the sap buckets on.  With all the work it takes THIS year to make syrup, I think the finished product will be selling for "about 100 bucks an ounce" !  Ha!
Sinking up to my knees in snow


Two helpful cats Spitfire and Skunker

One of yesterday's bags about half full of sap (about a gallon)


Hammering in the tap

4 comments:

Cookinmom said...

Love the pics! I've never seen modern day syrup collection, just the pics in the Little House books. :)

Becky Torzewski said...

Oh my gosh it wasn't until I saw you standing to your knees in snow that I truly realized how much snow you all have. Unbelievable! I'm so glad Harold is feeling better so you guys can do syrup again.

Sarah Snook said...

It's so weird to see how clear the sap is considering the final product. That's a lot of boiling!

Patty B said...

Maple sap has a high sugar content, but it takes 40 gallons of sap to make 1 gallon of finished syrup. As you boil the sap down, the sugar is concentrated and turns darker. Right now we have about 2 or 3 gallons of finished syrup made, and by Thursday we should have another 3 gallons made. We'll bottle it in pints and quarts. If the evening temps don't get down to freezing, the maple trees might start to bud out and then the maple season ends, because "buddy sap" tastes weird and bitter.