Showing posts with label tubing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tubing. Show all posts

Friday, January 10, 2014

Sugaring Season Begins

Derek, Kern, and Sue tapping
Sue puts the spout on a drop line
Kern drills the hole
Derek taps in the spout


We are always on the lookout for damage.  Here, Derek fixes a bite in the tubing.



Big ol' maple

Sue, in her cold weather gear

This past Sunday, we plodded through the snow and began tapping the beautiful, bare maple trees.  The amount of snow on the ground during tapping is always something we keep in mind.  In previous years, we’ve had to drudge through deep snow, several feet high, making hard work of an important task.  Climbing through snow up to your hips gets tiring!  

After Sunday, though, the temperature increased and we had some rain, melting a lot of the snow and making it easier to get around the woods.  Since then, the temperatures have been frigid and ice-cold (which might be an understatement!), but tapping has continued during the warmest parts of the day. 

As of now, it looks like there will be a warm-up tomorrow, so hopefully the sweet sap will start to flow!

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Woods Work

Scenes from a beautiful day spent working on the tubing system:


 
 

 

 
 










Saturday, November 17, 2012

Working in the woods


Working in the woods is an important part of our job.  Lately, we have been spending a lot of time checking our tubing for damage, like animal bites & chews and downed trees on lines.  We examine every inch of tubing, every dropline, and the entire length of every mainline.  We make sure everything in each sugarbush is tip-top so it will be ready for sugaring season.  This way there will be optimal sap flow in the spring.
 
A section of a sugarbush
Many animals, like squirrels, chipmunks & deer, chew on the tubing.  Along with the obvious lines chewed in half, there are also many smaller chews and punctures that need replacement in droplines and the actual line itself.  It is crucial that we inspect all of our tubing and fix any damage, from animals or just what incurs through time & weather.  We have also found many trees, both big and small, that have fallen on our tubing lines. 


Kern cutting up a fallen tree on the tubing
 Some excitement that always abounds when working in one particular sugarbush comes from the "dog-next-door," Izzy!  Izzy, a hound/lab mix, always runs over, her ears flapping in the breeze, and greets us.  We can't leave the vehicle door open too long, unless we want big, muddy dog prints all over the seat!  She is always bursting with energy, chomping at the bit to go on an excursion in the forest.

Izzy, Kern, & Sue
Romping in the sugarbush


Izzy
Sue


 
Derek - after a days work



 

 
 
 

 
 



Friday, April 13, 2012

Sugaring Season Comes to a Close

Tapped Maple Tree

Sugaring season has officially ended, and we are now in the cleaning process.  After maple season, cleanup is always a tedious, time consuming task in which everything is sterilized, from the tiniest tool or piece of equipment to floors and walls.

This season was not as productive as we had hoped.  The unseasonably warm weather and the number of consecutive nights it didn't freeze made it hard for the sap to continue to run.  However, we decided to stick it out and continued to draw sap as long as possible, collecting a total of 146,210 gallons of sap. This year's yield of approximately 2,200 gallons of syrup did not come close to last year's 3,000+.  Even so, we look forward to next year!



A Tap