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The alpaca is a gentle, intelligent, and
curious animal. In the U.S. they are raised for their intrinsic value
as breeding stock and for their fiber and are shorn once a year. Other
factors that make them ideal for new and small breeders are that they
don't require extraordinary care, feed, or housing and are easy to
handle and train.
In addition, national and regional
organizations like GLAA exist to help members promote and market their
alpacas and fiber co-ops exist to help breeders cost effectively
process their fiber.
The Animal
When
the Spanish invaded South America in the 1500's they found what to them
was a new type of animal--woolly with a long neck--called "pacos." From
"el paca" in Spanish, the word evolved to alpaca. Alpacas are members
of the Camelid family, which also includes camels, llamas, guanacos,
and vicuna. Unlike the llama and camel, which are used primarily as a
pack animals, the alpaca is raised for its fine fiber. The two main
breeds of alpacas are huacayas and
suris. As of December 2002, the
Alpaca Registry (ARI) showed registered currently over 40,000 alpacas in the U.S., about 33,000 of them huacayas and about 7,200 of them suris.
The
alpaca itself is a small endearing animal, generally weighing between
120 and 180 pounds. Their diet consists mostly of pasture grass and/or
hay and fresh water. Most breeders supplement with minerals and
vitamins, and some feed, especially during the depths of a Great Lakes
winter. In spite of the Alpaca's delicate appearance and gentle
disposition, they are hardy animals which adapt to nearly any climate
and require very little special care.
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In addition, alpacas are easy to handle and raise:
- Alpacas are gentle, intelligent, and easy to handle
- Alpacas do not bite, charge, or stampede. They do spit at each other (generally when food is involved), but it's rare for them to spit at people. They are safe around even the smallest of children
- They are social animals who communicate using a combination of body position and a gentle humming
Alpacas are also earth friendly:
- The alpaca's feet are padded and leave even the most delicate terrain undamaged as it browses on native grasses
- The alpaca is a ruminant with three stomachs. It converts grass and hay to energy very efficiently, eating less than other farm animals. (10 alpacas consume about as much as 1 cow.)
- Its camelid ancestry allows the alpaca to thrive without consuming very much water. (Though you should always provide plenty of clean fresh water!)
- A herd of alpacas consolidates its feces in a few spots in the pasture, thereby controlling the spread of parasites and making it easy to collect and compost for fertilizer

Though native to the high Andes plateaus of Peru, Chile, and Bolivia, alpacas have been imported to the U.S. since 1984 and they have adapted easily to the North American climate and conditions. Some of the first imports to the U.S. came from Chile and Bolivia. Later imports also included Peruvian animals, which came from regions and farms with more controlled breeding programs (like Accoyo and Alianza).
The Fiber
Alpaca fiber compares favorably to the finest merinos and is generally classed with luxury fibers like cashmere, mohair, and angora, both because of its fineness and its relative scarcity. As a fiber animal, alpacas are additionally distiguished by the fact that they produce a wide array of rich natural colors from whites and fawns to browns, greys, maroons, and true blacks. The Alpaca Registry (ARI) color chart categorizes this range into 22 distinct colors, but in reality the specific colors of the animals have over 200 distinct shades (see The Kaliedscope and Fiber Evaluation by Hoffman). The color classes make it possible to group fleece colors for processing.
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