

The little store in the alpaca barn is for alpaca products, some of which come from Peru, where Char’s daughter has been studying geoanthropology. They are experts and can shear an animal so that it has a perfect fleece ready for grooming and showing. It’s also lightweight.Īpril is shearing season, when crews, often from New Zealand, come to do the work. With the alpaca fleece, you can spin a warm yarn that is less irritating than wool because it does not contain lanolin.

Other alpaca owners send their fleece to Char to groom for competitions. It would be better used for socks, hats and other pieces of warm clothing. Diva also took a halter championship and won more awards, stealing the show.įleece is judged on color and quality of the fiber, so one alpaca could have a beautiful fawn-colored coat, but if the hair is too wiry, it’s not as desirable for show. Char kept and maintains that fleece for exhibition. One alpaca fleece, from Diva, won an award for best fleece in the nation. Once it gets over 85 degrees, they stay in front of huge fans in the shade of the barn.Īlexis Ivie, a University of North Carolina at Charlotte pre-veterinarian student, is an intern at the farm and has fallen in love with the furry girls and boys. They aren’t fond of hot, humid summers and love to be hosed down or sit in kiddie pools. Llamas make good guard animals.Īlpacas live 15 to 20 years, so they do become members of the family. Llamas, on the other hand, weight as much as 500 pounds. But once they do give birth, they can be mated again 14 to 21 days later.Ī grown alpaca weighs 150 to 200 pounds. The gestation period for an alpaca is 11 to 12 months, and the babies weigh 18 to 24 pounds. She had to learn about animal husbandry, fleece assessment and care, and farming. Now she breeds the animals for show quality and seed stock. When her oldest daughter was born, she quit work but looked for a second income or an investment. She is also a former bar examiner, as in the test lawyers must pass. With a degree in music education, Char took a bit of a leap to become an alpaca farmer. “All alpacas are domesticated livestock,” Char says. They come mostly from Peru and Chile and are smaller than llamas.Īlpacas are related to camels, and some of them even look kind of like camels. They eat hay and grass fortified with special minerals. Department of Agriculture before he can venture out, but for $120, you can give a gift no one will forget.Īlpacas are very smart, Char says, but not warm and cuddly. The recipient gets an Alpaca Gram T-shirt, with a picture of kissing alpacas. Char makes the arrangements and can bring along flowers or gifts. Ronny will wear a birthday hat when he delivers. Perhaps the most remarkable thing Char and Ronny are going to attempt is Alpaca Grams - when a card is not enough. Ronny can step into Char’s SUV and travel places with her as an alpaca ambassador. He was born on their farm in Ohio and belonged to a young woman with severe dyslexia and low self-confidence who helped train him. Apples are nice, but carrots are better.Ĭhar and her husband, Rick Johnson, have 24 alpacas, male and female, with an old friend rejoining them, Ronny the male alpaca. They love carrots and have soft lips to gently take them from your hand. Alpacas do not want you to mess up their coifs.
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Proper breeding is important to produce award-winning alpacas, or ones that have a gentle temperament and are trainable.ĭo not pet an alpaca on the head, please. The male alpacas are kept in another area because they can get frisky. In turn, they give her prize-winning fleeces and material for items she sells in a tiny shop in the girls’ barn. Char Johnson is their surrogate mom, making sure they are fed, watered, washed and happy.
