Do you collect maple sap for making syrup? When does the maple flow start in your area?
Phillip
I don't but the guy who built my house planted the maple trees that are here 160 years ago and he writes in his diary that it's frustrating trying to get syrup in Nebraska. The spring is too unpredictable. It was probably global warming... sorry, climate change...
Thanks for the humor Michale.
Yes I can understand the effects of energy used 160 years ago which might have started global warming way back then! One example; methane gas released from horse drawn buggies etc. most certainly caused a varied greenhouse effect that might have led to the uncertainty of when to collect maple sap by your homes original owner way out in Nebraska 160 years ago.
:shocked::cheesy: :wink:
Each late Winter/Early Spring is different and always has been. As we know the climate had always changed, and will continue to change with or without humans. lol If one does not believe it all one has to do is ask their local Groundhog on Feb 2. Even though we might get a different answer from year to year! 🤣 THE GROUNDHOG KNOWS 😂
I don?t know how folks who collect maple sap determine when the time is right to do so. Maybe the information provided by the groundhog is the answer? lol
Phillip
My son has a huge gum tree in his yard (also in Southeast Nebraska) and there is a tap in it where someone used to gather the sap ad left the tap... I don't know if they made syrup or something else from it.
Quote from: Michael Bush on January 03, 2023, 09:08:40 AM
My son has a huge gum tree in his yard (also in Southeast Nebraska) and there is a tap in it where someone used to gather the sap ad left the tap... I don't know if they made syrup or something else from it.
Interesting, I do not know the answer but to please my curiosity I would like to know.
Phillip
My ancestors used to make syrup from the sap of many different trees, including Maples and Birches. I never heard of gum being used, but I suppose there is some sugar in all tree sap.
It has to freeze at night to make the sap run when it starts thawing. You quit when you get sick of maple syrup. Or it gets to stought from the trees budding out. Usually start in March and done when the frogs start getting noisy. I am in NW Minnesota.
I think people around here make black walnut syrup. I've never had any, and I'm not sure what time of year is normal to harvest.