Backyard Sugarin' Book
SKU: 418201
Step-by-step guide to making maple syrup with 13 backyard evaporator plans.
Description
Description
Experienced sugarin' expert Rink Mann explains step by step how to make maple syrup in your backyard.

Product Highlights
- Details on constructing 13 different backyard evaporators
- Plus tips on picking the right trees, the boiling down process, taps and sap
- Now in its fourth edition
- 6" x 9", 94 pages
Details
- Foreword by Michael Farrell
- Introduction
- Planning Ahead
- Trees Taps and Saps
- Selecting Your Trees
- When How and Where to Tap
- Buckets and Pails
- Dealing with Frozen Sap
- Sap Storage
- Homemade Evaporators
- Engineering Principles of Backyard Evaporators
- Evaporator Pans
- Building a Homemade Evaporator
- Cement Block Evaporators
- Basic Block Sugarin' Rig
- Basic Block With Stack and Damper Controls
- High Capacity Block Rig with Multiple Pans
- Semi-pro Cement Block Rig
- Steel Drum and Tank Evaporators
- 25 Gallon Drum Evaporators in Stone Wall
- 50 Gallon Drum Evaporator, Wood Fired
- 50 Gallon Drum Evaporator, Oil Fired
- Converted Oil Storage Tank, Oil Fired
- Double Pan Converted Water Pressure
Tank Evaporator - Backyard Barbecue Conversion
- Congressman's Box Stove Conversion
- The Boiling Down Process
- Step by Step on the Author's Rig
- Canning and Storage
- Making Maple Sugar (For Those Who Dare)
- Anonymous Revelations From Backyarders
- Musings of a Backyard Sugarer
- Index
Excerpt from Homemade Evaporators page 31
Building a Homemade Backyard Evaporator
Making your own backyard evaporator is a process of sizing up what materials you have lying around your place, what you can scrounge up elsewhere, and putting together something that will get a lot of hot flames against the bottom of your evaporator pan or pans with a reasonably efficient use of firewood and with some degree of fire control.
If you're related to a building supply dealer, maybe you can get him to give you some "irregular" cement blocks to build your evaporator out of, or a local plumber might have some discarded water pressure tanks out behind his shop. With an emery blade on your electric saw or a cutting torch, you can make a very professional acting (if not looking) evaporator. Then too, a heating contractor might have an old oil storage tank he'll let you have, which would make up into a nice fire box, and some rusty old stove pipe, which might be just the ticket for your smokestack.