Sunday, August 31. 2008Summer Vacation in Yachats - the Last Day![]() No trip to the Oregon coast is complete without some whale watching..... it was rough out there! ![]() Clan Stewart on the beach at Yachats - and for those that know us yes we did watch the Sound of Music. ![]() Sunset on the last night with crashing surf in silhouette..... Saturday, August 30. 2008Summer Vacation in Yachats - Day Two![]() Stairs to the beach in Yachats ![]() Yachats famous covered bridge ![]() The lighthouse keepers house, available for B&B and reputedly haunted.. Friday, August 29. 2008Summer Vacation in Yachats - Day One
Today is the first full day of our three day vacation in Yachats on the Oregon coast.
![]() The seaside town of Yachats - pronounced YAH - HATS ![]() Starfish hanging out near the tidal pools. ![]() Crashing surf - the locals say its amazing during the January storms and I have no reason to doubt them! Thursday, August 28. 2008Healthy Signs in New Cria
Its always reassuring when you see a new cria urinate. A very good indicator that she is getting fluids and that her kidneys are working just fine. Of course unless you are eagle eyed and watch them all day there is a certain amount of good fortune involved. But better lucky than rich as my old man used to say.
![]() Cria plumbing working just fine. A new crias stools will be like tiny grains of rice so they are easy enough to spot on the ground. Speaking of alpaca stools I did take a sample from Lucy to the vet yesterday for a fecal test. Not because I thought she had worms particularly, but she just happened to deliver a sample as I walked past and I always keep a zip lock bag in my pocket when out in the alpaca paddock. They are extremely handy just for this very reason. Wednesday, August 27. 2008Half Way
Well here we are at Wednesday half way through the week already and still one hundred and one things to do on the alpaca farm before I go on vacation for a few days.
Our new arrival is fine and is still called "Mia Sorella 08" until we can think of a new name for her. The sire is Paul Revere and I am very pleased with the results. ![]() Mia Sorella '08 The vet will be coming out next Thursday to give the once over and draw some blood for the usual BVD test and a few drops for the DNA card required by ARI. Well better get on there are some boys out there that need there toe nails trimming and time is moving right along. Tuesday, August 26. 2008A New Alpaca Arrives on the Farm
Sometime in the last 12 hours Mia Sorella gave birth to a female cria....
![]() Mum and baby doing just fine.... ![]() Mac sprays her navel with disinfectant and then fits her with a coat. The nights are quite chilly so a winter coat is a great idea at this time of year. If the temperature really gets up during the day then I will take it off but for now its a good precaution as small animals of any species are always susceptible to extremes of temperature and newborns may not have a fully functioning internal thermometer so better safe than sorry. Meanwhile Minne continues to rebuff Conmans romantic overtures.... ![]() A lovely side step by Minne leaving Conman in a cloud of dust and spit....poor Conman! Monday, August 25. 2008Farm for Sale
Our next door neighbor (if that's the correct term) has decided to sell I think! Well the place is on the market but at $10 million in the current climate it does look like something of a fishing trip to me. But who knows maybe some aspirational parent still in the grips of Olympic fever will snap it up in order to get his or her offspring into the Olympic team.
The property consists of an Olympic dressage arena that seats 300 people with attached clubhouse and gym. Grounds include a 1501 sq ft original farm house, 10 barns with 39 stalls including a veterinarian barn all fully fenced. Home site approval on the top of the knoll with spectacular views of Ashland and the valley. Large pond, well with two holding tanks, and 33 acres of TID rights. ![]() Sliver Spring Farm ![]() Stables most of which were imported from Holland. ![]() The Olympic sized arena with seating for 300 and underfloor watering to control the dust... Sunday, August 24. 2008More on Alpaca Fiber in Peru
Having written yesterday about the amount and quality of Peruvian products coming into the US I was inspired to take a look at the Michell web site.
The Michell Group of companies is quite impressive and there are fully three generations of the Michell family working in the family business. It is well worth taking a trip to their web site and looking at the various brands they have developed. Michell Brands So go take a look and I will see you back here later. Meanwhile its time to do some more spit testing on the (hopefully) perganant female.... ![]() Minne leaves Conman in the dust...thereby proving that she is pregnant.... Saturday, August 23. 2008Alpaca Importers
For some time now I have been receiving marketing e-mails from a company in Peru that is producing alpaca garments for men, women and children. When I first got into this business some years ago now we were as an industry always sceptical about the quality and style of garments coming out of Peru and other South American countries.
However, that has changed and both the quality and style have greatly improved. ![]() Women's Alpaca Sweater from Peru ![]() Men's Alpaca Sweater from Peru One company in particular is now targeting small retailers around the globe and offering comprehensive support in terms of own label branding and even custom marketing services. They are far ahead of our own North American Fiber Cooperative and it does make me wonder how we will ever catch up. Friday, August 22. 2008Alpaca Fiber - International Year of Natural Fiber 2009
Following on from a piece I wrote this week about Keep the Fleece I wanted to talk some more about Peruvian alpaca fleece.
Exports of alpaca fiber from Peru have nearly doubled to more than $43 million in the last four years, as models strut catwalks from Beijing to New York wearing alpaca garments of ever shape and size. New York-based designer Rachel Comey loves the feel of alpaca and its more exotic cousins the vicuna and guanaco, known collectively as camelids. Vicuna is the costliest, trimmed once every two years from the rarest of the three breeds, which roams the plateaued border region between Bolivia and Peru. A yard of the fabric sells for at least $3,000, while a basic stole starts at $950. A similar PEruvian stole made of alpaca — which is farm-raised and makes up 99 percent of camelid exports — sells for about $47, while llama fleece is rarely commercially sold. Peruvian producers are repositioning alpaca as a sexier luxury thread, spun into casual clothes and evening wear to appeal to young professionals with the disposable income for luxury goods. Laird Borelli, a senior features editor at Style.com. says that demand is in part assisted by the popularity of alpaca with environmentally conscious designers who want the softness of fur without the guilt. “If you have a fabric that can get as close to fur as that, it’s an amazing thing,”said New York designer Daryl Kerrigan, who has used alpaca to make coats. Lima, Peru-based designer Jose Miguel Valdivia said ".......designers and textile producers are finding ways to re-create Incan precision on a larger scale and now use the fleece to weave softer fabrics that remind some of the world’s finest furs." Peru’s government is also boosting efforts to promote the fibers, sending local designers to Europe to lobby the movers and shakers in the world of fashion. Andean breeders in still-poor parts of rural Peru are seeing an income boost, providing a steady supply of top-grade fleece. Breeders and textile companies are trying to improve their techniques for separating coarser fibers, shorn from alpacas’ necks and hoof-areas, from longer, more delicate flank hair. They’re looking for a scientific way to boost fleece quality, too. Some years ago Michell & CIA S.A. — the world’s largest alpaca fleece producer — opened a breeding center in Peru’s southern Puno province to isolate traits responsible for finer fleece. Now its scientists breed alpaca and teach their methods to small farmers. The idea is simple: The finer the fleece, the lighter, more sought-after and expensive it is. And as an alpaca breeder here in North America all we have to add to that is the more weight of fine fleece per animal the better.
Posted by Adrian Stewart
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Thursday, August 21. 2008Big Framed Alpacas
I have started to notice in the very few alpaca shows I see that there is a trend towards smaller more delicate looking alpacas...or maybe its just my imagination. Personally, I prefer the larger boned alpacas that have a good strong frame.
Why do I prefer the larger framed alapacs? Well its just a gut feel I have that the females can carry cria more easily and then birth more easily. Plus breeding can involve quite a bit of coercion from the male and I feel a larger alpaca is more able to take that. Still I have no evidence to back any of this up its simply a personal preference. ![]() Is big better? Let me know what your thoughts are. Wednesday, August 20. 2008The Things Folks Do to Sell Their Alpacas
Every October when folks in this part of the world are busy with AlpacaMania across the other side of the country in Ohio almost a 1000 alpaca breeders from all points on the compass go to Magical Farms in Litchfield Ohio. Where for the last 9 years the Forstner family have winded and dined alpaca buyers before inviting them to participate in the alpaca auction.
Here in their own words is a small extract of what you might expect. Yes, every year Magical produce alpacas of the highest quality, and this year they have dug deep into their breeding program to bring you the very best! ![]() The "Magical" Pirate Ship Quite who will play the part of Captain Jack Sparrow and who will be Elizabeth Swan is yet to be decided......all very odd to my English way of thinking...but when in Rome do as the Romans do...maybe that will be next years theme.... Tuesday, August 19. 2008Wildfibers
A magazine called Wild Fibers has started a Non Profit called Keep the Fleece.
They are producing a calendar that will be distributed in the fiber circles (all fibers are welcome including alpaca). It will be one of the main fiber events in the US and will have a large kick off this fall in New York. With their calendar comes the opportunity to have events listed. This is a great opportunity especially with 2009 being designated the International Year of Natural Fibers. Here is an extract frome the Newsletter: How It Began by Linda Cortright Editor and Publisher Wild Fibers Magazine Last year, Fernando Alvarez president of Jacques Cartier Clothier and I had a meeting at the UN in Rome to discuss the IYNF. It was clear at that time that the goal of this global celebration was to educate and increase awareness about the natural fiber industry. The ultimate objective is to create new relationships that could evolve into long-term sustainable enterprises. There is little question that certain sectors of the natural fiber world need to realize an increase in market share in order to ultimately withstand the continued growth of synthetics. What Is Keep the Fleece? As a result of the meeting in Rome, I conceived Keep the Fleece as a simple international fiber contest promoting the use of natural fibers within the handcrafter community. With only a few dozen flyers and a barebones Web site it soon became clear to me that the contest concept was in fact "not so simple" and definitely "not enough". Meanwhile back on the farm we will be spit testing Minne again to make sure she is holding her pregnancy - hopefully sometime tomorrow morning. the farm where she is going are just about to have a new barn installed so I am sure she will be very comfortable in Bills capable hands. If you think you are able and willing to help then follow this link and complete the survey. Keep the Fleece Survey Monday, August 18. 2008If You Cant Stand the Heat Stay Out Off The Alpaca Farm!
The temperature is unreasonably high at the moment and touching 110 degrees.
The alpacas seek out shade whenever it gets this hot and if at all possible will stand in the spray from the irrigation system to cool down.... which sounds like innocent fun but the irrigation water is full of microbes and tiny vegetable matter so this is not good stuff to be washing into your nice alpaca fleeces..... Patches of the various pastures are drying out now and when that happens the grass almost dies before that pasture comes around for its next irrigation cycle. Bottom line it is essential to get every part of the pasture soaked when you do run an irrigation cycle. Once the ground starts to dry out then the dreaded star thistles rear their spiky heads and appear to flourish on fresh air...the only way to get rid of them is to dig them out....it takes time but in the long run it saves a great deal of time and money. We have tried herbicides in the past but they are not very selective and the slightest wind will cause mayhem. Sunday, August 17. 2008Cats and Motorcycles
AUGUST 17—CAT NIGHTS COMMENCE
Following on from yesterdays amazingly interesting piece of news about Grain Moons did you know the term “Cat Nights” harks back to a rather obscure Irish legend concerning witches and the belief that a witch could turn herself into a cat eight times, but on the ninth time, she couldn't’t regain her human form. This bit of folklore also led to the idea that a cat has nine lives. Since August is a “yowly” time for cats, this may have prompted the speculation about witches on the prowl.... Anyway the good news is I did pass my motorcycle test so now it wont be costing me $10 in gas every time I have to go down into town to buy something....unless it winter in which case I will travelling in something warmer and less economical. Interestingly of the 12 people who took their test yesterday i would say 9 or 10 were doing it to save on their gas expenditure especially those who commuted to and from work each day.
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