Posts Tagged ‘Winter’

19
Mar

Maple Season 2009

   Posted by: Mikko    in Maple Syrup

Here are pics from the first weekend of tapping…

anniedrinks

The first thing you need to know about maple tapping is that it is virtually impossible to do without a beer.
I call the following photo series: “Yeah, We’d Tap That”

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Once the trees are drilled and the taps placed, then we hang the buckets.

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Some get one..others get two.

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And some, have nicer buckets than others…

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NICE CANS! (Had to be said.)
The way that we collect the sap is to drag it out of the woods in a wheelbarrow, with a tiny cat in each bucket.

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This is after just one day of sitting on the tree:

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And now, the shining star of our season… our new Leader Evaporator!

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An evaporator is a combination wood stove and compartmentalized boiling pan that facilitates the boiling down of the sap. Much better than the bottom of a crate MacGuyvered as a boiling pan.

The evaporator was put into the greenhouse and vented through the roof.

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The sap is brought into the greenhouse in water carboys, then collected into garbage cans, then loaded into the evaporator about 5 gallons at a time.

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I’m so proud of how much we have accomplished! And all of our limbs are still intact! So far. (Knock on wood.)

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Now… can we find this boy a date?

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14
Mar

Mud Season

   Posted by: Mikko    in Maple Syrup

entryway

Mud Season has arrived! The sun is out and melting anything white and pretty in sight (except for me, of course.) See all the little specks on the carpet? That is sawdust from the mighty fallen soldiers strewn about the yard. Living in a field of wood chips and sawdust is a lot like getting sand in everything when you live at the beach — we’re finding sawdust just about everywhere. Good news is you can’t really feel it between the sheets.

Ew. You people are gross. Of course this is why I love you.

mapleup

Yes, last weekend we got a GLORIOUS hiatus from the depths of winter and it was like throwing our sanity a life raft. After we danced about naked in the driveway for a while (not true) and drove around town with the sunroof and windows down blaring U2’s “Streets Have No Name” (true), we got down to business.

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First, there were trees to tap.

anniedrills

Thanks to Brian’s brother Joe and his wife Annie, we were able to place about 40 taps. (Because some trees are large enough to take 2 taps, I count taps, not trees.) This past winter we had scored about 50 maple collection buckets with taps and hooks from Craigslist. After disinfecting them with boiling water, the trees were drilled and the taps placed. This was WAY easier than last year when we were sticking homemade taps in and then rigging them to plastic tubing that lead to water carboys. After one day, some buckets were already 1/3rd full. This week Dad added another 20 taps.

Then, winter slapped us across the face again and the trees stopped flowing. We’re going to inaugurate the boil this weekend.

ninjaburn

After tapping trees, we then spent the rest of the afternoon clearing tree debris from the yard. Now, instead of 4 years to get a clear yard it’s only going to take us something like … 3 3/4 years.

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To tell you the truth I absolutely loved it. While Brian, Joe and Annie were charged with burning brush, I was making piles of limbs to be chipped Fargo style. I was having a grand ole time sawing off branches and feeling like the Discovery Channel’s “Ax Men” was going to invite me for an audition any day now.

Then this happened…

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Ok, so I got shiny* and went on a little photo shoot of the lichen on the felled pine trees. Some people take a smoke break … I shine light on the beauty that surrounds us. Call it a vice.

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All told, we worked for 3 hours straight (minus water and art breaks) and the lawn barely looks different. I couldn’t help but smile thinking of my former life in NYC and what I would have been doing on a warm spring weekend: shopping the farmer’s markets for treats that other people produced and wandering around the city for exercise. Now look at me getting all buff in the fresh air as I build my farm by hand. I wonder how all my city friends are doing…

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Now taking reservations for The Accidental Farm’s BadAss Country Livin Boot Camp!

*”Shiny” is a term coined by my very focused husband. It refers to my ability to get easily distracted and was inspired by a snorkeling trip. We would be swimming together, something would catch my eye and I would disappear, indubitably saying, “Ooooh, shiny!” My entire family is afflicted with Shiny Syndrome which now, come to think of it, might be part of the reason we have earned the name The Accidental Farm.

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6
Mar

Mitakuye Oyasin

   Posted by: Mikko    in The Farm

uptippytop

Great Spirit, Mountain Ancestors, All My Relations, Blessings be here today as I come before you Honored One.
You have seen many sunrises and sunsets upon your branches,
Your sacred roots have been quenched by life giving rains.

Honored Tree Spirit, I give thanks to you,
…for the singing birds that you shelter
…for the music you sing in the breeze
…for listening to the voices of the creatures
…echoing the ancestors strength.

Respected One, I ask your permission and humbly request your presence for my guided purpose as Great Spirit directs.

All things belong to you, Creator, all things are sacred. So this day I honor you Tree Spirit and humbly Thank You.

Mitakuye Oyasin
– Hanoochi

We have cut down the trees. Not all of the trees, but enough that it feels like hundreds, even thousands. You might recall that during the ice storm in December of last year we feared for our lives. Now, with spring on the horizon and firewood in demand to boil gallons of syrup, it was time to make a change.

“Mitakuye Oyasin” is a prayer of the Lakota Indians. It means “All My Relations” or “We Are All Related.” That’s it. That is the whole prayer, just those two words, but when you think about it, there isn’t much more to be said.

According to a site that I found on the Web, “To pray this prayer is to petition God on behalf of everyone and everything on Earth. ‘Mitakuye Oyasin’ honors the sacredness of each person’s individual spiritual path, acknowledges the sacredness of all life (human, animal, plant, etc.) and creates an energy of awareness which strengthens not only the person who prays but the entire planet.”

tree2fall

Taking these trees took my breath away. I live in the house my grandparents built. These trees were the backdrop of my childhood. I can’t look into the yard and not remember my grandfather who meticulously cared for his forest like some Suburbanites cultivate their lawns. As a young girl, it was the way that this rugged man of the outdoors could connect to me and my siblings. My favorite memories are of walking these woods and visiting my favorite trees with my Pompa by my side.

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But I’m not a little girl anymore, my Pompa passed away a long time ago, and these trees are no longer cared for. My heart broke a little when I came home and the tree cutters had already cleared away a large portion of the back yard, including a tree that I wasn’t even aware that I was attached to.

backyardcut

But what was done was done and there was no use sitting in a pool of lament. I spent the day wandering from window to window and watching these highly skilled men prune away what I finally realized were shadows of memories. These trees represented the memory of my grandparents, but they also crowded out the light of my very own existence in the same space. I was trying to grow my very own family in the shade of my past and we were all starting to wilt.

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One by one, as the trees fell, I stopped holding onto what was and started to look at what had arrived: sunlight, and lots of it. Sunlight flooded into the house, illuminated the dark corners and warmed the floors and walls.

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When it was all said and done, it took 2 days and about 25 trees. We held a little ceremony for the trees where we made offerings and gave thanks to the trees for their service and my grandparents for our memories.

My girls love playing in their room now that it is the sunniest one in the house. Brian and I walk about the yard planning out the locations of new gardens and fruit trees and bushes that I have been craving to plant.

I know that my Pompa would be happy. I can feel it. These trees were a part of my family’s life for so long, but they are a part that needed to move on, for the health of us all. I believe that my grandparent’s know that and are proud of me for doing the hard thing and will guide me as I continue to thrive from their beautiful legacy.

Ponstump

Mitakuye Oyasin

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