Not a great time here today.
It did not get below freezing again last night so today’s run was pitiful at best. In addition it rained most of the day. This normally does not make a difference to the sap in the buckets, except for the buckets covers where the drill operator made the holes a little too large. Then the rain can run down the tree picking up dirt and become stained by the bark.
I had one bucket of about a gallon of sap I had to throw away. I am fairly certain it would have been fine, but I am not going to risk a batch of syrup on “pretty sure it would be fine”.
Here are two saps, the rain contaminated one and a good one.
The one on the left was contaminated. Before I threw it away I tested both for sugar content.
I use two hydrometer:
Note the two red lines on the longer one, that one is used to see when the syrup is done. If you use it in 200 degree syrup it will float to the top mark, if used in cooler syrup it floats to the bottom Mark. This one is a necessity. Others you end up guessing and get watery syrup, or candy.
The smaller one measures the sugar content of raw sap. I use it infrequently, mainly to give me an idea how my trees are doing.
I used it on the two glasses of raw sap to make sure it was a contaminant and not just high sugar content turning the sap orange. High sugar content does turn the sap more orangish around here.
Here are the two readings.
Note the darker one is a tad higher but not enough to make it that orange. Had it read 4.5 I would have kept the sap.
We are suppose to freeze again tonight and tomorrow, so I might get a few more gallons of sap. I am praying for a two week cold snap.
If you decide to tap trees, when it starts to get warm like it is here pay attention to the tree buds and the sap. If it turns cloudy taste it. BTW I hope you have tasted raw sap so you know what good sap should taste like. It won’t kill you, maybe.
If the tree buds start to open up that tree is done for the year. I have 2 silver maples that open first for me. The buds are quite swollen but none have opened yet. I look at often and try to Will them smaller.
Hows everyone else’s year going?
I had a goal of 30 gallons of syrup this year. I am currently 26.75 gallons short. This is not looking good here.
I have 38 buckets out, each bucket averages 2 taps, today I collected 30-35 gallons of sap is all, some trees gave me nothing. A couple a gallon or so but one gave me almost 5 gallons.
Makes no sense.
Tomorrow will be better, I was getting ready to go to 40 acres I own in way northern Minnesota to tap. I thought I would leave Sunday for a couple weeks, but our Governor imposed a shelter in place order today. I am not sure if my syrup qualifies as an exemption give to food producers. I tend to think it does...
It is cold enough up there I could produce my last 27 gallons. Then slip into birch syrup mode.