Maple Syrup: Nature's Spring Tonic. -- Since 1918

Category: 2019: Season 102 Page 3 of 4

Bottling Day

20 overnight.  43 and sunny today.  Above 32 by 9:30 AM.  Trees started dripping.  By Noon, dripping at a good rate with PSI up to 15.  We will wait to collect until tomorrow to catch the complete run.
 
Into the woods by 8:00 AM to empty a milk can into the finishing pan.  It was ready by 9:30 AM.  Filtered and started bottling.  But didn’t watch temperature carefully and the syrup got too hot and precipitated out particles making it cloudy.  We were about half done.  Stopped bottling this batch.    Back into the finishing pan along with half of milk can of syrup to finish and filter again.  Every year we seem to mess up a batch.  The syrup is good, its just more work to cut back density with sap, re-finish and re-filter.   We only bottled 1 ½ milk cans.  The plan was to bottle two milk cans.
 
The trees will drip into the late evening.  Forecast low is 30.
 
Back to the farmhouse by 3:00 PM.

Picked Up The Tail End Of The Big Run

34/45 today.  Started out cloudy.  Around 1:00 PM the clouds broke and the sun appeared.  Bottling plans fell through when we got sick this morning.   Recovering now, but taking it easy.

Crew when out collecting at 3:00 PM.  Picked up 200 gallons.  This was the tail end of the Monday/Tuesday run.  There was no new sap today.

Done Cooking

30 overnight.  Cloudy and 38 during the day.  A little drizzle.  Into the woods by 6:00 AM to start cooking.  R/O going by 7:00 AM.  Went to 7° Brix.

Several interruptions during the day with visitors caused us to miss starting/stopping pumps or opening/closing valves.  We missed starting the transfer pump to empty the collecting tank into the storage tank.  By 10:00 AM the R/O stopped because it was out of sap.  We took the opportunity to run a rinse cycle before starting again. Then we missed closing the permeate value to the water storage tank.  This caused some sap  to back flow into it.  When visitor come we stop to talk with them, but it breaks our concatenation and routine causing us to miss a step in our process.

10 batches of syrup in the milk cans.  Filled two milk cans.  We had very good boils.  By 5:30 PM we were done.  Tomorrow we have to bottle again.

700 Galllons

26 overnight.  Sunny and 45 today.  The last three days have been the idyllic weather associated with maple syrup season:   freezing nights, sunny days, the snow sill in the woods but melting.  We seldom get that.

Into the woods by 6:30 AM to wash the finishing pan.  Had help at 7:30 to dump in a milk can syrup.  We needed to bottle to free up milk cans for more syrup.  We had two full milk cans of syrup and started on a third.  We knew we would collect today and that meant more syrup coming.  Bottled 27 quarts.  Grade A Robust.  The first syrup is usually lighter.

Trees started dripping by 10:00 AM.  The sap from yesterday was already in the buckets so we knew there would be a big haul.  Set out collecting at 3:00 PM.   Many full or overflowing pails.  We had storage for 600 gallons.  Had a spare 100 gallon tank at the yet that we setup.  We ended up with 700 gallons of sap.

Our new pump and hoses with quick connect finally worked as envisioned.  This was a good to get the pump and hoses figured out..  The pump problem was a bad extension cord that didn’t deliver the volts or amps the pump needed to turn over.  It takes about 12 minutes to empty the collecting tank.

Tomorrow we cook.  Most likely we won’t cook through all 700 gallons.   Need to check if we have to collect tomorrow again.  But the dripping did slow down by 5:00 PM which is good.  Forecast is 33 overnight with clouds and snow showered tomorrow.

Focused On Cooking

21 overnight.  42 and sunny today.  Trees started dripping around 11:00 AM.  We focused on cooking.  Wanted to get yesterday’s 410 gallons cooked down.

Into the woods by 7:00 AM.  Started the R/O by 8:00 AM.  We had to thaw some pipes and it took longer to wash the front syrup pan.  Went to 7° Brix.  R/O done by 1:00 PM.  Finished cooking by 4:00 PM.  Back to the farmhouse by 4:30 PM.

Better pressure on the R/O today.  Stayed at 400 PSI.  Fixing that leaky valve must have helped.

We may bottle tomorrow.  We will collect.  Expect a lot of sap.

Ah, For A Cool Refreshing Sip

21 overnight.  38 and sunny.  The forecast called for partly cloudy today.  With the exception of a short period around sunrise, it was clear all day.  With no wind today’s 38 felt warmer then yesterday’s 38.

We were concerned the buckets would be full of ice from yesterday’s run.  The trees dripped into the late evening before freezing.  That frequently causes big ice chunks.  By 10:00 AM it was above freezing.  The sun did its magic and melted the bucket ice.  By 11:00 the trees were dripping.   PSI rose to 15.

We when out collecting at 3:00 PM.  Took sips of sap from several buckets to quench our thirst.  Picked up 410 gallons.  Still had problems with our new pump.  We think now the extension cord is bad restricting the voltage the pump needs to start.    After collecting we tried the pump on different outlets and it worked.

Cook tomorrow.  Forecast is 23 overnight and 40 tomorrow.  Hoping we can collect on Tuesday again.

There’s A Sap Run Now

25 overnight.  Sunny and 37 today, but a cold North West wind made it feel cold.  Around 2:00 PM the taps started dripping.  They are running now and will run until they freeze tonight.  Forecast calls for low 20’s overnight.  We will get ice.  Tomorrow partly cloudy with high 38.    With luck we get ice melt and can collect in the afternoon.

Tree pressure went from 1 PSI this morning when it was below freezing to 13 PSI this afternoon when the taps started dripping.  Although its limited data, it looks like tree pressure increases as the trees start to drip.  It will be interesting to watch if higher pressures correspond to better sap runs.  And could we start to predict from tree pressure how much sap to except.

Found a leak in the R/O.  During the wash cycle yesterday the wash tank lost water.  It should be a closed loop during the wash cycle that circulates water through the membrane.  We use about 17 gallons in the wash tank.  About half was lost.  During the rinse cycle today we looked for the leak.   We could see drips under the 220 volt motor and a pump seal.  Its unlikely two separate places could leak at the same time.  As we continued to investigate we noticed two fine sprays from a pump drain valve.  One stream went to the 220 volt motor.  We loosened and tightened the valve several times and got it to reseal.    Most likely there was a particle – tree bark, twig, small grain of sand, etc – that prevented a good seal.  R/O pressure seemed a little off yesterday during concentration:  it approached 500 PSI.  The R/O automatically stops at 500 PSI to avoid damage.  The floor around the R/O was also unexpectedly wet.  We’ll see if the leak fix helps with R/O pressure too.

First Boil

38 overnight.  Cloudy with snow showers all day.  Temperature up to 40 so the snow showers were unexpected.  Must have been colder at higher altitude.  No accumulation.

In the woods by 6:00 AM.  Needed extra time to assemble and prepare the R/O.  Got the evaporate pans washed out.  Filled the evaporator with sap and got the fire going by 7:00 AM.  Turned the focus to the R/O.  Connected all the hoses.    Inserted the membrane then ran 200 gallons of water through it to prepare it from siting idol during the off season.  Started concentrating at 10:30 AM.  Took the sap to 7° Brix (12:1).  R/O completed by 3:00 PM.  Done cooking and back to the farmhouse by 5:30 PM.

When starting from fresh sap it takes several hours to get going.  It was 1:15 PM before the first batch was ready.  But after that we took off batches about every hour.  Four batches into the milk can.     No sugar sand or nitre but the syrup was darker then expected for the beginning of the season.

Forecast is 25 overnight.  Connected the heating tape to the R/O water tank hose to protect it from freezing.  Tomorrow 40 and partly sunny.  Hoping for sap.

First Collection

44 overnight.  Drizzle.  Continues to melt.  Water everywhere.  It was cloudy, misty, foggy, drizzly until 3:00 PM.  The sun came out.  Looked like we’d have good weather for collecting.

Into the woods by 9:00 to prepare for collecting.  Setup the tank pipes.  Wash the tanks.  Setup the pipes to the evaporator.

Started collecting at 3:00 PM.  Got a tank full by 4:00 PM.  We setup the new quick connect hose to the  collecting tank.  When we opened the value the pump primed from the flow of sap into it.  We were excited to see that.   But when we plugged in the pump, it didn’t start.  It was getting power, but was seized.  Disappointment.   The pump was stored in the house off season so it should have worked.  We reverted to the old pump.

As we went back out collecting, lite rain started.    Just as we were finishing we go a down pour.  But within 30 minutes the sun was out.

We collected 375 gallons at 2.5 Brix.  Tomorrow we start cooking.

Into The Woods This Afternoon To Prepare

35 overnight. A week ago it was -16 overnight.  March weather changes quickly.  We got rain, but not as much as predicted.  Still, its messy.  38 and cloudy today.  The rain and melt water on the ice makes it very slippery.  We walk carefully so we don’t fall.   The trees did drip overnight.  We plan to collect tomorrow.

Into the woods this afternoon to prepare.  Got a tank of water.  We need that to flush the R/O membrane.  We use the  collecting tank to haul the water so had to get that over before we filled the collecting tank.   The R/O holding tank is setup and filled with the water to flush the membrane.

Tomorrow we setup pipes to the tanks and maybe connect the pipes to the R/O.

Tree pressure:  5 PSI.

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