So far 151 quarts (37 gallons, 3 quarts) for the season. No new sap for the day, just boiled what we had. The weather does not look promising. Thunderstorm tonight. 60s on Monday and Tuesday. This may be the end. We did get our filtering problem solved. We were not using enough filter aid in the pressure filter. Started using more filter aid and got crystal clear syrup. But we had to reheat and re-bottle several gallons.
Picked up 320 gallons of sap today. This does seem to be big run we were waiting for. Every year there is big run when most of the sap is collected. So far for the week we have collected over 1200 gallons. But the sap is not too sweet, About 2.0 or 2.1 brix. That means it takes more sap to make a gallon of syrup. The forecast is for warming weather. 60s and even 70s. That will bring a quick end to the season.
Last night we had a thunderstorm. Thunder, lightening, hail, rain. March is a month of a lot of different weather. There is a saying that thunder over an open woods means it will snow again. An “open woods” is a woods without the leaves on the trees. There is more sap to collect, likely tomorrow, Friday. And we hope its not going to get too warm now. We all wonder how global warming will impact maple syrup production.
We may be into the large run for the season. Collected 440 more gallons of sap today. Since sap is used by the trees to bring out leaves on the trees, at some point the trees are going to push the sap no matter what the weather. While we typically want freezing nights and sunny days, when the trees are ready with the sap, it will run. Bottled 38 quarts and 1 pint today for season total of 99 quarts so far.
The weather warmed a bit yesterday and we picked up 450 gallons of sap. Its not very sweet however, 2.2 to 2.3 brix. But today its cold again, down to 20, high of 30. But that gives us a chance to catch up and boil down the sap we have. We did bottle 25 quarts (6 gallons and 1 quart) today. Later this week it should warm again so we are expecting another run.
We have 35 quarts and 1 pint (just about 9 gallons) bottled so far for the 2007 season. In a normal season we expect to make about 240 quarts (60 gallons) so we have a ways to go yet. Waiting again for the weather to change.
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday were too warm; 50s and even 60s. Now its too cold, 20s, until maybe next Tuesday. March is always a month of great weather change. So we will have a pause in production. We did bottle 6 quarts yesterday and all the sap is now boiled through.
The pause should allow to fix our bottling pan. The spout we use to fill bottles has a broken seal and leaks. That makes a sticky mess. So we have to find a replacement.
Collected 175 gallons of sap. Bottled 19 quarts of finished syrup.
But the weather is very warm. Had of high of 63 and low of 38. Too warm for good sap flow. By Thursday it is forecast to turn cooler again; more toward normal.
We bottled our first syrup of the season today. About 4 gallons. We had a problem with our filter press. It was not pumping through syrup properly. We had to get it fixed because it was really unusable the way it was. It turned out to be very easy. We took it apart and found the stop value clogged up. Looks like an old filter got sucked into it. We noticed problems toward the end of last season too so it was probably the same thing. It should work properly now.
No collecting today. It was very warm, over 50. By Thursday it gets closer to normal again.
We collected 440 gallons of sap today. That is the most for a first collecting that we can recall. It was down to about 26 last night and today was sunny and about 43. You get warm real fast when working in the woods. The snow has settled some, but its still difficult carrying two full 5 gallon pails. It makes you tired and hot. Monday and Tuesday are forecast to be warmer, into the high 40s or low 50s. Later in the weeks it cools down to the upper 30s again.
We started the evaporator too. Early indications are that switching the order of the pans makes a big difference. It looks like we will be able to boil about 30 gallons/hour, up from 20 gallons/hour. This will save us time and fuel wood. We had the entire flue pan at a rolling boil which we have not seen before.