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The Rural Voice, 1998-10, Page 36No wonder Ron Hubbs neighbours thought he was crazy. The Prince Edward County farmer was preparing to take his best farmland out of crop production and plant it to maple trees. Nearly 10 years later, Hubbs is happy with the results and, as the trees grow, even the neighbours are starting to become interested in his work instead of questioning his sanity. Hubbs is one of a number of Ontario maple syrup producers experimenting with planting maple orchards. A maple orchard in Ontario is defined as an area of maple trees intensively managed in field environments to produce large volumes of sweet sap, Dave Chapeskie, agroforestry advisor with OMAFRA at Kemptville told the Provincial Agroforestry Conference in Woodstock in September. A maple orchard, says Chapeskie, is a way to expand a traditional sugar bush with high-producing trees. That's what Hubbs had in mind when he risked the ridicule of his neighbours back in 1989. He had a 116 acre farm with 40 good workable acres and the rest mostly in hardwood bush. He had cashcropped the 40 acres but after his neighbour Lyle Vanclief ran for parliament (he's now federal minister of agriculture), he lost his custom operator and it was hard to get prompt service. The idea for a maple orchard began in 1981 when they suffered winterkill in their apple orchard and had to cut many of the trees. He thought about planting maples in their place but when he mentioned the idea to his neighbours they thought it was a joke and he reconsidered. By 1989 he decided to go ahead anyway and began planting trees. His orchard has been a low- expense proposition, Hubbs says. "All the work can be done by hand and we do it in stages. It's a little bit of hard work but it can be very Whether in a traditional bush or a maple orchard, sugar maples can add to farm income or even be the main crop. Tapping a maple resource By planting maple orchards some syrup producers plan to expand By Keith Roulston 32 THE RURAL VOICE rewarding in the end. "The goals we set for ourselves were to plan 10 acres of our best farmland, to plant 100 trees per acne, which is a spacing of 21 feet by 21 feet, and to get the trees to a tappable size in 20 years. We hope to at least double the sugar content of the trees we have in our natural bush." With the 21 -foot spacing the Hubbs are putting in twice as many trees per acre as they want to end up with. When the trees are five to six inches in diameter they will take sugar sweetness tests. "By the time the trees reach 10 inches in diameter, or a tappable size, we will have half of the trees, the less sweet ones, cut down and we'll be just left with what we call the super sweet trees in the orchard." The Hubbs family begins site preparation the summer before they plant by marking out the site, using stakes to mark the 21 -foot spacing. in September or October they spray around the stakes with Roundup to kill the competition from other vegetation. They dig the holes in the fall so they can save time in the spring. They did one fall planting but weren't pleased with the success, though others have assured them fall planting has worked in their experience. In the fall, they also go to the bush and try to identify the saplings they plan to transplant the next spring. "We look for saplings that are six to 10 feet high, that show lots of new growth. That tells us that they are used to the sunlight and they will transplant probably quite well." The height of the tree is chosen because they have a deer problem and shorter trees will be browsed off. The Hubbs like trees with a smooth, slightly reddish bark. If the bark is gray and knotty at the bottom it's probably an indicator the tree is slow growing, Hubbs said. The planting is generally done in the first couple of weeks of April. They dig as big a root -ball with the tree as they can handle by hand, then slip a burlap bag under the ball to prevent the. roots from being too disturbed during transportation to the orchard. The tree can then be set in the hole and the bag slipped out from under the roots. n mid-May, after the frost is over, J they prune about 20 per cent of the lower limbs and take out any forks at the top of the trees. The first few years they also work hard to prevent competition from other vegetation using Roundup and a back -pack sprayer. "I've never used any fertilizer though 1 know people who have." Hubbs says he's just beginning to see the value of pruning the trees in the orchard. "I think there should be a lot more emphasis put on it because it will carry quite an impact down the road." He mentioned the experience of another speaker at the confernece, Ray Fortune of Lanark County who, during last spring's vicious ice storm in eastern Ontario, found very little