A blog about farming, unschooling, feminism, 22q deletion syndrome, cooking real food, homesteading, permaculture, and motherhood.
Monday, 17 February 2014
Friday, 14 February 2014
Maple Tapping Part Two, Let's TAP This.
Supplies. Temp outside for flow needs to be above freezing during the day, below freezing (33 degrees F) at night. These are the days that sap flows. The warmer and sunnier the day, the faster the flow. We can sometimes get 3 full buckets from one tree in a day when it is 60 degrees in daylight and freezing overnight. Thank you Iowa! Flow starts today!
Read here for getting supplies ready.
This is the diameter of the trees nearest our home that are suitable for tapping. If a tree has more than a 21" diameter, it will support 2 taps, which we've done in a few places.
These are the leaf buddings. When the tree buds out for real, the sap takes on a really, really bad taste, called bud taint. Sap will keep flowing, but you DO NOT want this sap to contaminate your syrup boil. It smells fine as sap too, but when boiled down is tastes like dead mouse smells. NOT KIDDING. So, trust me, pay attention to these buds as the tapping time goes along. We usually get about two weeks of flow.
The leaf buds are also the best way to identify maple species in winter time. I'll do another post on that in the future.
This is so easy, our nine year old can do it. Chad is helping though. Drill the hole at a good height for you to reach, a few inches away from last years taps, and about 2-3 " deep. Be sure to tilt up so the sap runs out. Best place to drill is the south side of the tree under a big branch - south side warms up fastest, sap will be moving to the branch.
This is a good bore hole.
This is the spile.
Push it in with your fingers.
Hammer it. Lightly on the flat part, not the end of the spout.
These hooks were put on by the folks who mailed them backwards from how I like them, so I had to take it out and re-orient the hook. If using a bag you can leave the hook off entirely.
Perfect.
Hang bucket, attach lid.
Ta da!
Or hang the bag. It doesn't need a lid (and is WAY cheaper!)
Bonus picture: this tree? Glorious maple that it is, it is a bad choice for tapping. First, part of it is rotten and actually smashed down and broke things. Second, ALL sap from it is tainted. Gross. Any of it will ruin the pot of syrup. The taint tastes like Ritz crackers with a chaser of spoiled Brussels sprouts.
Read here for getting supplies ready.
This is the diameter of the trees nearest our home that are suitable for tapping. If a tree has more than a 21" diameter, it will support 2 taps, which we've done in a few places.
These are the leaf buddings. When the tree buds out for real, the sap takes on a really, really bad taste, called bud taint. Sap will keep flowing, but you DO NOT want this sap to contaminate your syrup boil. It smells fine as sap too, but when boiled down is tastes like dead mouse smells. NOT KIDDING. So, trust me, pay attention to these buds as the tapping time goes along. We usually get about two weeks of flow.
The leaf buds are also the best way to identify maple species in winter time. I'll do another post on that in the future.
This is so easy, our nine year old can do it. Chad is helping though. Drill the hole at a good height for you to reach, a few inches away from last years taps, and about 2-3 " deep. Be sure to tilt up so the sap runs out. Best place to drill is the south side of the tree under a big branch - south side warms up fastest, sap will be moving to the branch.
This is a good bore hole.
This is the spile.
Push it in with your fingers.
Hammer it. Lightly on the flat part, not the end of the spout.
These hooks were put on by the folks who mailed them backwards from how I like them, so I had to take it out and re-orient the hook. If using a bag you can leave the hook off entirely.
Perfect.
Hang bucket, attach lid.
Ta da!
Or hang the bag. It doesn't need a lid (and is WAY cheaper!)
Bonus picture: this tree? Glorious maple that it is, it is a bad choice for tapping. First, part of it is rotten and actually smashed down and broke things. Second, ALL sap from it is tainted. Gross. Any of it will ruin the pot of syrup. The taint tastes like Ritz crackers with a chaser of spoiled Brussels sprouts.
Wandering
Not all those who wander are lost.
-J. R. R. Tolkien
Indeed. This adventure has begun. My friends and family sent me off into
the darkness of an Iowa winter night, on a double decker bus to
Chicago.
Arriving in Chicago. Mornings are gorgeous in the Windy City.
Union Station actually had 1000 crockpots cooking lasagna. I was also there for the morning wake up of the homeless off the benches. Homelessness is not as visible in Iowa as it is in Chicago or Memphis or Atlanta.
My friend Evonne met me and took me out to breakfast! Note to self: learn to make crepes.
Seriously though, Evonne smells like heaven. Why? Because she is a master of olfactory psychophysical phenomena.
Leaving Chicago late morning. The city seemed to be thawing out and waking up. I'd like to visit again, walk around a bit. Not this trip though.
Folks getting on the bus were buzzing with anxiety that we'd be stranded in Memphis is the Atlanta route was cancelled. Atlanta was dealing with a major ice storm. 2 inches of ice, snow, and more ice. Our bus drive, Dennis, reassured us and was so much fun! He greeted each of us as we boarded and said something nice to everyone, made sure no one got left behind, was entertaining, and reminded us to call our rides an hour before arriving.
Still, we travelled on. This is what Illinois looked like the entire trip. Until.....St. Louis. Oh that glorious arch! The grand Mississippi!
The sun set somewhere near Arkansas. By then the bus was packed full. It was a tight and uncomfortable seat. My window was stuck cracked open and the air was nice once I realized the fresh air helped my new affliction: motion sickness. Oy.
Then we arrived in Memphis! The road thumped in 4/4 time and poetry immediately flooded my head. You know how some songs talk about the ghosts of Memphis? This. Everything, even the electrical lines buzz with a musical quality.
My grand plan had been to skip lunch and get dinner someplace lovely in Memphis at out 2 hour layover. Nope. Drop off was in the middle of a warehouse district with a local booze store the only thing open. There was a Subway inside, so I made an attempt....closing in 5 minutes out of everything. Ugh. I bought a lime soda and then it was a bottle top and I could not open it.
There is more. Oh yes there is...but for now, just know that I survived the next two hours and got my soda opened. Also, pro tip? A bottle cap can be opened with any lighter. ANY. LIGHTER. No worries. I will share that story later.
Freaking tired. At this point, loaded up, headed to Atlanta by way of Birmingham, AL, I was done with being on a bus. Too bad for me, I had eight hours to go. Eight. Hours. I was sticky, hungry, a little jacked up with adrenaline from surviving the two hours in Tennessee. Sticky. Also, riding a bus with 30 people does not smell lovely.
Still, I fell asleep, twice I think. There was a bus evacuation around 2 am. For fuelling? I don't know. I was a zombie.
I was so grateful to wake up to a Georgia sunrise. Oh my sweet Georgia!
Only the view I caught was startling. I saw a boot sticking out of this gully. Then I realised it was full of people. Sleeping people. By the time I got my camera out, there was not a good picture, but on reflection, I would not share that picture anyway. These were PEOPLE. Real people sleeping in an ice filled gully along the highway. People. Like you or me.
Then this view emerged. Then for a moment I thought I was delusional. This looks like IOWA. DES MOINES? NO. NO.
Then we pulled in by the Civic Center and a row of housing THAT LOOKS JUST LIKE THE ONE IN DES MOINES. PANIC. SLEEP DEPRIVED PANIC.
No worries. FEET ON THE GROUND IN ATLANTA.
The very icy ice covered ground.
See? LOOKS LIKE DES MOINES. It isn't though. It is way better for an architecture nerd like me.
PS, I miss my babies back in Iowa so, so much. My chest hurts when I think about it.
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