Ashley & Liberty

Stopped. Watched. icon

Downtown Home & Garden has plastic taps in stock for maple syruping. Michigan’s first crop each year. Sap is running today, but likely to stop tonight. Mid to late February is more normal.

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10 Comments

  1. January 24, 2010 at 4:44 pm | permalink

    Linda Diane (or anyone)–is it possible to tap trees somewhere in the city? I don’t have my own maple tree and would kind of like to adopt some.

  2. By Linda Diane Feldt
    January 24, 2010 at 5:02 pm | permalink

    I spoke with a city forester, and they do not allow people to tap city trees. Sugar maples are already too stressed she said, and while all other maples can be tapped they are concerned about people who don’t know what they are doing putting in too many taps, or someone being injured by the taps, or a pail being adulterated by a passerby.

    While you can apply for a permit to do something to a city tree,I was told that everyone asking for permission for maple syruping will be denied.

    Find a friend with a tree, and share a bit of syrup with them. It doesn’t have to be a sugar maple, and even birch and sycamores can be tapped. Although I haven’t tasted the syrup from non-maples, and Euell Gibbons says sycamore isn’t worth the effort. But I did all my syruping from what I think is a silver maple last year and it was excellent.

    40 gallons of sap makes one gallon of syrup. Boil it outside. Or use the raw sap for cooking – makes great oatmeal if you boil your cereal in sap rather than water! Also great bread, other baked goods.

    This early thaw may cause a bit of decrease in the flow next month, but we should be OK. Meanwhile – tonight and tomorrow there may be maple sap icicles on the trees. A tasty surprise treat! Be sure to try them if you see them.

  3. By Dave Askins
    January 24, 2010 at 6:28 pm | permalink

    RE [1]: Try Washtenaw County Farm to see if you can use their trees. Details from a Chronicle story last spring: [link]

  4. January 24, 2010 at 8:52 pm | permalink

    How do you keep the squirrels out? Ours are curious about everything and think they own the place.

  5. By Cosmonican
    January 24, 2010 at 8:59 pm | permalink

    I have neighbors (won’t say who or where) who tap into city trees on their hellstrip. They have flexible plastic tubes leading from the tap to covered 5-gal. buckets: squirrel proof.

  6. By Linda Diane Feldt
    January 24, 2010 at 9:06 pm | permalink

    Two other options. The plastic taps are easy to fit with the flexible plastic tube. But the right size and jam it into the tap. It stays. You can set a plastic milk jug on the ground and use tape or plastic wrap or aluminum foil to secure the tube going into the jug. Or, either buy plastic bags designed for the task or use zip lock bags secured with duct tape or some other fastener. Again, the bag is on the ground. And any tampering by people or animals would be obvious.

  7. By Rod Johnson
    January 24, 2010 at 9:56 pm | permalink

    “hellstrip”?

  8. By Cosmonican
    January 25, 2010 at 12:28 am | permalink

    Hellstrip: the area between the sidewalk and the street. So-called because it’s like hell to grow anything on that strip.

    Example: [link]

  9. January 25, 2010 at 11:22 am | permalink

    If you gather the sap, from the previous day, in the early morning, there may be ice in the bucket. This ice can be thrown away. The sap at the bottom will be liquid and will contain the sugar. This will save a lot of boiling.

  10. By Rod Johnson
    January 26, 2010 at 8:36 am | permalink

    Fascinating. This is of interest to me because I once did a study (using Usenet as my data-gathering mechanism) that included eliciting terms for exactly that strip. I found several (parking, extension, boulevard, city property, etc.) that were used by lots of people, but out of several hundred responses, “hellstrip” appeared in the data exactly zero times. This was in about 1991, I think, so it seems to be a new term that has gained a lot of currency very rapidly. (Sorry for getting off-topic.)