Mirrabook Alpacas
BRIEF ALPACA FACTS

ALPACAS
and
LLAMAS are
members of the South American Camelid family, having been domesticated
for around 4000 years.
For a more in-depth explanation of the
difference between the
alpaca and llama, we suggest you go to the bottom of this page for an
enlightening article by Berry Carter, our friend and colleague from Lama
World.
ALPACAS
now number approximately 40,000
in Australia.
ALPACAS
are a hardy animal with a soft padded foot giving low impact on fragile
soil.
Soft padded, two toed foot.
They
are also more efficient in converting fodder to energy, than
sheep, require less fencing maintenance than cattle as they do not test
fences, and browse rather than graze, therefore having minimal pasture
impact.
ALPACAS
are of 2 distinct types.
The
HUACAYA is the most plentiful in Australia at present.
Close up of
Huacaya fleece

The
SURI type displays the long dreadlocks, with a lustrous,
silky feel.

Close up of Suri fleece

ALPACAS
come in a wide spectrum of natural colours.

ALPACA
fibre is highly sought
after both locally and internationally as it is non-allergenic,
extremely strong, hard wearing, shrink
and pill resistant. ALPACA
garments provide a lighter weight, with higher insulation properties
than sheep wool, combined with a silky luxuriant feel.
ALPACAS
are not prone to Footrot and are resistant to Flystrike due to the low
oil levels in their fleece. Generally
free from lice and requiring no tail docking, ALPACAS can live to around
25 years and can be productive for many of these years.
ALPACAS
gestation period is approx. 11.5 months, and often considerately give
trouble free birth in daylight.
LLAMAS are larger than their
alpaca cousins, have banana shaped ears and hold their tales in a
"teacup handle" pose. Otherwise, their husbandry and maintenance is the
same as that for alpacas.

See the curved ears on this handsome Llama
........and 'Spear' shaped alpaca ears.
LLAMAS & ALPACAS - The Difference ?
It was market day at Berry.
The two llamas and two alpacas were in their pen. The two alpacas had a sign
hanging from each of their necks which read ALPACA. The two llamas had a sign
hanging from each of their necks which read LLAMA. Our first visitor of the day
approached, looked at the animals for a while, smiled, frowned and then turned
towards me and said in an apologetic voice: “it may sound a silly question but
would you help me. What is the difference?”
Silly or not the question was repeated throughout the day as it has, and
no doubt will be, wherever alpacas and llamas are viewed throughout Australia by
the non owning public.
And as if that visitor’s confusion was not enough a kid
appears in a stroller pushed by his mother. He
points towards our pen with wavering finger, and cries out. “Look mum.
Look. Camels”! This exclamation also was repeated throughout the day.
The kid is right of course.
In the beginning, millenniums ago, there
were probably only camels and they roamed the plains of North America until, suddenly somewhere
in time they all migrated.
One group travelled north
across the land bridge between Russia and Alaska, which is now the Aleutian
Islands, into Asia and another variety appeared in the highland country of
western South America. The second group were humpless, sandy coloured, and a
little over a meter high. Actually there seem to have been two varieties, one
slightly bigger than the other, known, respectively, as guanaco and vicuna and
collectively as camelids. Through a process of domestication which continues
today, some of the larger guanaco became the llama and some of the smaller
vicuna became the alpaca.
But it gets more complicated!
Ask an alpaca owner to describe an alpaca and you will be
told there are several different kinds, some with short muzzles some with long
probably depending on whether they originated in Chile or Peru; some have bunchy
fibre coats like sheep while others have lanky dreadlocks like cashmere goats
and they have different names huacaya and suri. Likewise, a llama owner will
talk about short hair (ccarra) and long hair ( cha’ku.) and, yes, even of
lanky, dreadlock suri. In case you are not confused enough both llama and alpaca
owner may then make reference to some cross breeding between species and start
talking about huariso and misti.
So to be too technical here may not serve any useful
purpose identification of difference. Therefore, lets keep it simple!
Start with the size. Alpacas rarely grow bigger than 100 kg
while llamas rarely grow smaller than 110 kg, commonly weigh in at 140 kg and
sometimes as much as 200 kg.
Llama owner Wendy
Fandry of Perth, interviewed by a TV reporter, summed up llamas as being “eye
level animals” because everything about a llama is bigger than an alpaca It is
also longer and straighter – its head, its back, its legs, its neck, its ears
although these last disobey the rule of straightness and have a charming
tendency to bend inwards banana like occasionally even touching at their tips, a
condition no self respecting alpaca would tolerate. There is an elegant yet
imperious aspect to the llama which can be daunting to potential new owners and
extremely threatening to four legged intruders of the canine and vulpine
variety, but with that comes a pride of bearing and the tag handsome.
Alpacas, on the other hand, tend to be tagged as cute.
Their lesser size, making the neck and legs appear shorter in relation to the
rest of their body, tend to give a more humble
presentation while a certain roundness of body shape surmounted by
triangular ears that are almost pixie like give a cuddly look not perhaps
associated instantly with the llama.
So size is the first big difference. Size also is the key
to the second great difference – their use.
Traditionally in South America camelids were bred to be
eaten, grow fibre, and carry loads. Although both llama and alpaca, I am told,
taste the same to eat, and, I vouch, feel the same to wear, inevitably,
the larger animal, the llama, became
used for transportation and the smaller animal,
the alpaca, stayed home to
grow that fleece. And so it is today.
A llama serves man by its athletic prowess, an alpaca by
the quality, colour and quantity of fibre on its back. The sight of several
hundred alpacas in a paddock (carrying several hundred fleeces) makes sense
whereas several hundred llamas could raise the question why. There is a rich
variety of colour in llama and alpaca fleeces but the last thing alpaca breeders
wants is more than one of those colours on any one of their herd at a time,
whereas llama breeders may rejoice in the whole spectrum of colours on any one
of their herd at a time. The
alpaca’s smaller physical size also can have handling advantages at shearing
time.
Llamas are designed for work.. They pull carts and carry
packs, both activities disadvantageous to alpacas with their smaller size, heavy
fleece, and closer proximity to the ground, the fleece running the additional
risk of being damaged in the work place. Moreover, because llamas work with man
their upbringing is different to alpacas. Llamas are trained to be more
individual, more understanding and tolerant of human eccentricities, to serve
man individualistically, and to share a relationship with him or her, whereas
alpacas live as a herd and think as a member of that herd.
Which should you own?
Ah! The answer to that may require an analysis of what
makes YOU different!
Berry Carter, LAMA WORLD
For more information on llamas for sale,
please go to:
www.lamaworld.com.au
Return to top of page.