What else do you need to do to it besides tap the tree and catch the syrup in a bucket?I have a giant honey maple tree in my back yard. Thinking of making maple syrup next year. (I'm about three months too late for this year.) Anyone here ever tried this before? There's a ton of stuff on the Internet about doing it. It doesn't seem too hard.
That's pretty much it. Just boil it down and filter through a cheesecloth a couple of times. There are a bunch of YouTube vids on the process. Here's a pretty good one: LINK Here's another: LINKWhat else do you need to do to it besides tap the tree and catch the syrup in a bucket?I have a giant honey maple tree in my back yard. Thinking of making maple syrup next year. (I'm about three months too late for this year.) Anyone here ever tried this before? There's a ton of stuff on the Internet about doing it. It doesn't seem too hard.
Yeah, that doesn't sound too difficult. Does the syrup taste different from a honey maple vs other kinds?That's pretty much it. Just boil it down and filter through a cheesecloth a couple of times. There are a bunch of YouTube vids on the process. Here's a pretty good one: LINK Here's another: LINKWhat else do you need to do to it besides tap the tree and catch the syrup in a bucket?I have a giant honey maple tree in my back yard. Thinking of making maple syrup next year. (I'm about three months too late for this year.) Anyone here ever tried this before? There's a ton of stuff on the Internet about doing it. It doesn't seem too hard.
The hardest thing might be to get a large boiling pot that doesn't cost an arm and a leg, get a propane burner that it fits on, and buy (or make) a few taps. I guess I have 8 months or so to obtain these. I might build a crude brick open-top kiln for boiling the pot, and use wood instead of using propane. It would take more fooling around, keeping it stoked and all, but it would be more fun too.
I'm planning to do this with my 5 year-old son. This seems like something that would be fun for a kid to do.
Ha ha! I dunno. Ask me one year from now. :lol:Yeah, that doesn't sound too difficult. Does the syrup taste different from a honey maple vs other kinds?That's pretty much it. Just boil it down and filter through a cheesecloth a couple of times. There are a bunch of YouTube vids on the process. Here's a pretty good one: LINK Here's another: LINKWhat else do you need to do to it besides tap the tree and catch the syrup in a bucket?I have a giant honey maple tree in my back yard. Thinking of making maple syrup next year. (I'm about three months too late for this year.) Anyone here ever tried this before? There's a ton of stuff on the Internet about doing it. It doesn't seem too hard.
The hardest thing might be to get a large boiling pot that doesn't cost an arm and a leg, get a propane burner that it fits on, and buy (or make) a few taps. I guess I have 8 months or so to obtain these. I might build a crude brick open-top kiln for boiling the pot, and use wood instead of using propane. It would take more fooling around, keeping it stoked and all, but it would be more fun too.
I'm planning to do this with my 5 year-old son. This seems like something that would be fun for a kid to do.
Make sure you check the holes for squirrels before you start "tappin" away!!Ha ha! I dunno. Ask me one year from now. :lol:Yeah, that doesn't sound too difficult. Does the syrup taste different from a honey maple vs other kinds?That's pretty much it. Just boil it down and filter through a cheesecloth a couple of times. There are a bunch of YouTube vids on the process. Here's a pretty good one: LINK Here's another: LINKWhat else do you need to do to it besides tap the tree and catch the syrup in a bucket?I have a giant honey maple tree in my back yard. Thinking of making maple syrup next year. (I'm about three months too late for this year.) Anyone here ever tried this before? There's a ton of stuff on the Internet about doing it. It doesn't seem too hard.
The hardest thing might be to get a large boiling pot that doesn't cost an arm and a leg, get a propane burner that it fits on, and buy (or make) a few taps. I guess I have 8 months or so to obtain these. I might build a crude brick open-top kiln for boiling the pot, and use wood instead of using propane. It would take more fooling around, keeping it stoked and all, but it would be more fun too.
I'm planning to do this with my 5 year-old son. This seems like something that would be fun for a kid to do.
What I should do right now is scope out the woods for a couple other maple trees that I could tap. There's a lady at my church with about 40 acres of woods behind her house. She lets me cut firewood there. I'm sure she would let me tap a couple maple trees too.
The article didn't say they were having sex. But it seems like that happens all the time. And people always get all up in arms about it. But the thing is, high school teachers having sex with their students has been going on, like, forever. Is there anyone who went to high school and *didn't* know about a teacher having sex with a student? There were a couple of situations in my high school. [/size][/background]Principal caught in car with shirt unbuttoned, smoking marijuana with student, police say
By Kate Jacobson Sun Sentinel
A local charter high school principal was caught in the back seat of a car, shirt unbuttoned, smoking marijuana with one of her students, police said. North Palm Beach police arrested Krista Morton, 45, a principal at Mavericks High School, and an 18-year-old student after they got a call about suspicious people in a car, according to a police report.
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A few years ago I took an interest in Cuba and Fidel Castro and read half a dozen books on the topic. This book looks like a must-read for me.Inside Fidel Castro’s luxurious life on his secret island getaway
By Juan Reinaldo SanchezMay 10, 2015 | 6:00am
For 17 years, Juan Reinaldo Sanchez served as bodyguard to Fidel Castro. But when he became disillusioned with the Cuban dictator’s hypocrisy and tried to retire in 1994, Castro had him thrown in prison. Sanchez made 10 attempts to escape the island, finally making it to the US in 2008. Now he reveals all in his new book, “The Double Life of Fidel Castro.” In this excerpt, Sanchez exposes “El Jefe’s” privileged life. To Cubans, Fidel Castro presents himself as a man of the people, claiming to make only 900 pesos a month (about $38) and owning no property other than a modest “fisherman’s hut” somewhere on the coast.
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In truth, El Jefe is worth hundreds of millions and owns 20 properties, including a chalet where he goes duck hunting every year and a private marina in the Bay of Pigs.
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