The Alpaca Blogger
Search 

Happy Easter 




If you wondered how the baby booties mentioned in my last post came out, now you know! Not perfect but not too bad I like to think. Pretty tough knitting as far as all the tiny pieces and all of the sewing up but worth the result. These were from one of the patterns in Debbie Bliss's book, "Nursery Knits." I took a couple of liberties with colors and yarns but otherwise followed the pattern and, for once, I had no trouble figuring out what the instructions meant. She's terse but clear.

Here is the side view so you can see the bunnies' tails. Hand spun alpaca yarn, of course!





[ view entry ] ( 1582 views )   |  [ 0 trackbacks ]   |  permalink  |   ( 3.1 / 874 )
Silk Skeins / Mallard Breeding???! 
I hate that I have been too busy to blog but there it is. I have suffered through a mini tornado with subsequent loss of power for days, the altering of a formal dress for my daughter, the annual re-building of the Maryland Sheep and Wool Website and numerous other traumas and I have been spinning and knitting but haven't been able to photograph it or blather on and on about it. Some people might think that that's a good thing. Okay - more like a lot of people!

Here's my crazy husband helping to fix a neighbor's barn roof after our exciting, mini-tornado.






The good news is that I have finished updating the MD Sheep & Wool Festival's website for 2008 so anyone who's interested can go there and see what classes will be offered, what the T-shirt design will look like, who the vendors will be, etc. For the first time in many years, I will not be a vendor but I will be there taking classes and helping to run the Jr. Handspinner's contest as always. If you end up in the Mitred Square Engineering class, please say Hi, I'll be in there too.

Click link below for the website:

MD Sheep & Wool Festival Website

I actually met the new guy who will be taking over as webmaster for the sheep and wool festival when I move this summer and he seems very nice but I feel miserable to be leaving the Festival Committee after this year's Festival. Wahhhhhhhhh! :sadface;

They are my friends and I will miss them all very much. Also, they are super useful for free knitting advice and they give me a free Festival T-shirt every year. I may have to kill the new guy - nothing personal.


Meanwhile, I did finish using up my stash of exotic fibers (mentioned in the previous post.)





Pictured above are the Ingeo skein, plyed with a Suri Alpaca / Cotton blend (top in photo.) I love the way this came out! Skein of Merino wool, remnants of two alpaca singles plied together and a skein of Tussah silk plied with soy silk. The soy was wonderful and soft to spin, the Tussah was harder but the sniny color is soooooo beautiful! Merino is always a joy to spin and the Suri blend was pretty easy to spin too.

Not pictured is a skein of 100% Suri that was given to me by another alpaca breeder. It spun up like hairy barbed wire so I threw it out. Not trying to look a gift horse in the mouth but some fleeces are just not worth sending out to be processed.

Here's what it looked like in the roving though. This was my first clue that this one might not be worth spinning - look how much guard hair:




Now if I could only knit all of these skeins into something and see how they feel and act.... but, I am stuck trying to finish Debbie Bliss, bunny-eared baby booties for a baby shower present instead. If you have never seen Debbie Bliss's baby patterns for knitters, they are pretty much the cutest thing in the entire Universe. I'll have to take a photo - if I ever finish them.


I get a lot of weird e-mails pretty much constantly but the latest was from a guy who wanted to know if I could sell him a female Mallard duck!!!! I have a photo of a pair of Mallards somewhere here on this blog where I sometimes put photos of cute animals that show up at my farm and I guess this guy found me on Google and thought I sold Mallard ducks. Isn't it Illegal to sell wild animals? And, how do you deliver them, in the duck trailer? People, try to read the web pages you find BEFORE you hit that e-mail link.

If you have read this far without dying of boredom, here is the part that will finish you off. I have to BRAG, BRAG, BRAG about getting an article of mine published in International Camelid Quarterly's March 2008 edition. Of course it is an article that will tick off the "I'm an alpaca BREEDER - who can bother with fleece?" alpaca people. Can't give up my reputation as most hated alpaca person on the East Coast without a fight. Article is called, "Coming out of the Cottage" (as in that slightly condescending phrase, "cottage industry.") If you're too cheap to buy the magazine, I have a copy on my website but, really, you should subscribe to Camelid Quarterly if you're into alpacas - it's a very good magazine.

PS. If you think I'd complain about altering a formal dress for my daughter but spare her the indignity of being plastered on my blog, of course, you'd be wrong. Look how pretty she is!






[ view entry ] ( 1182 views )   |  [ 0 trackbacks ]   |  permalink  |   ( 3 / 728 )
The more I spin exotic fibers the more I love my alpaca! 

Icicles hanging outside my front door

Aren't icicles so cute when they are plastic with little lights inside? Not so cute when they're real though.


Now that the years of having my own farm and hand spinning studio are coming to an end and we will be moving, I have been making a valiant effort to do what we fiber addicts call "de-stash". Regular people call this using up the stuff you already have before you buy more but that makes it sound a little too easy in my opinion. It's more like fiber de-tox for hardcore addicts. Is there a 12 step program for this?

I have now spun up my collection of bamboo roving, silk caps (bombyx mori) Blue Faced Leicester sheep (BLF) roving, Merino sheep roving, Yak top and Ingeo (chemically extracted from corn) top.

I still have quite a few more bags of rovings and tops to work my way through but I'm slowly converting them all into yarn. If you're thinking, "Well, then you'll just have to de-stash on all those handspun yarns.".... don't think that thought hasn't occurred to me. I know!

I already blogged about how much I hated spinning the bamboo HERE.

The Blue Faced Leicester and Merino were both quite pleasant to spin but I liked the BLF better because it had a longer staple length. Here is the BLF skein:



hand spun Blue Faced Leicester yarn



So pretty! I really want some more of this!
(When I am done de-stashing of course!):winkyface;


I found the silk caps pretty hard to draft but I love the color so I would buy silk to spin again.
(When I am done de-stashing of course!):winkyface;


Since I paid $5.25 per oz. for the Yak top, I thought it would be very good quality but now I am not sure. It was neither as fine as I thought it would be nor was it smooth like top usually is. Despite saying, "top" on the label, I am thinking is seems more like roving. In other words, it seems carded not combed. Yak is supposedly much finer than alpaca on average but this Yak certainly doesn't feel finer. That coupled with the super short staple length, about 3/4 of 1 inch, made it difficult and unpleasant to spin.

Now I am knitting it into a hat requested by my son, Nick, and it is not fun to knit either! It's kind of heavy and dead on the needles and does not slide easily. And it has a slightly unpleasant smell even after having been washed. All in all, I'll take alpaca over this stuff any day!



hand spun Yak yarn



Maybe if I had a photo and a name to go with this particular Yak, I'd feel a little better about it. Since I'm used to knowing the animal my hand spun yarns come from, I find it's not as much fun without that personal (animal?) connection.

Ingeo? Also expensive, also a nightmare to spin! Why does anyone buy this stuff? The ingeo would not draft well. It's got no give at all and it doesn't slide easily through the fingers. It tends to break off in little tails here and there. Very annoying! Here is is on the bobbin:



hand spun Ingeo yarn



Ingeo is supposed to wick moisture really well and also be "antibacterial" but is THAT really a big consideration in clothing? maybe if you live in the jungle or something.

I am deeply un-concerned about antibacterial qualities of clothing right now. Here's where I am living right now, snowy, icy Maryland:


ice covered branches outside my window



Today is day two of a winter storm. First is snowed huge, fat flakes and many birds and squirrels camped out on the trees near our 3 bird feeders waiting for a turn at the food.



puffed up dove waits to eat




Squirrel uses tail as snow shelter


Then we got freezing rain that covered everything outside with 1/2 inch of ice and split my favorite Mimosa tree by a third.




my favorite Mimosa tree split by ice
:sadface;



The kids out of school again and driving is really not a good idea so what else is there BUT fiber fun?

I spent most of the day plying singles into 2 ply yarn, winding skeins from my bobbins, winding balls from various skeins to start knitting with and knitting up swatches to pick a needle size for my next project, a turquoise alpaca/wool blend cardigan.


Meanwhile, I got alpaca baby photos
this week from Other Kate (McKelvie) showing the crias born to 3 of my old girls, Latte and Primrose and Morgan, this past Autumn. A little late on those photos Other Kate, but I will forgive you because the babies are soooooo cute. Thanks!




Morgan's daughter, Caramel




Primrose & Latte's boys, Precipice & Cadillac



Good job girls! Mommy's very proud of you.


stay tuned for the next blog: alpaca sock experiment....(insert suspensful organ music here)



PS. any OTHER alpaca breeders want to complain to KnitPicks about this chart in their current issue? They hear it from me all the time.




knit picks chart
Yellow highlight and red text are mine of course.



PS> SORRY IF ANY OF YOU ARE GETTING PINGED BY TONS OF UPDATES ON HERE - THE HOST'S BLOGGING SOFTWARE IS NOT WORKING PROPERLY!






[ view entry ] ( 1148 views )   |  [ 0 trackbacks ]   |  permalink  |   ( 3 / 408 )
Alpaca Yarn - Review of "Discovering Alpaca" 
My friend, Roseann, was kind enough to mail me her copy (not a photocopy!) of the magazine Interweave Knits - Winter 2007 issue’s article, “Discovering Alpaca, Your Guide to Choosing, Using, and Enjoying Yarn” by Clara Parkes.

Roseann, also known as the Uber Knitter (see link to her amazing knitting blog above at right.) wanted to get my reaction to this article since we two have discussed the spinning and preparing of alpaca fiber as well as knitting with alpaca yarns many times. In fact, Roseann’s blog currently shows a photo of her beautiful, cabled alpaca hat, handspun and knit from the fleece of my former alpaca herdsire, Valentino.

Link to Roseann’s Valentino-fleece cabled hat

Alpaca Cabled Hat

That Roseann! We love her but what a showoff - the hat is perfect!


Since my long-winded reponse to the above-mentioned article may be too much for some readers, my main points are:

1. Huacaya and Suri alpaca fleeces and yarns are very different and should be discussed separately. For superior luster, drape and brilliant color, choose Suri alpaca. For wool-like qualities, choose Huacaya alpaca.

2. Different brands of alpaca yarns have greatly differing qualities and should be discussed individually.

3. There is so much misinformation available regarding alpacas and their fleeces and yarns that it is best to ignore any out of date sources of information and concentrate only on the more current scientific information.

For those stalwarts who want to know more, here is the entire review:

I was overjoyed to see Clara Parkes, who happens to be the author of, “The Knitter’s Book of Yarn,” rightly points out that,

“…many of these, docile, quiet animals ended up in places like petting zoos, where the onslaught of eager, outgoing children sometimes prompted the animals to defend themselves by spitting. This earned alpacas a bad and unjustified reputation as ill-tempered beasts. But spend a quiet day with the animals on their own turf, and you’ll quickly fall in love.”

What a perfect way to describe the situation when would be alpaca lovers try to interact with alpacas out in public and then feel disappointed that alpacas are not as “friendly” as they would like them to be! That paragraph alone makes the entire article worth reading in my opinion.




photo of my son and Chloe happily spending time together during halter training at home on our farm




However, I was dismayed to find some of the information offered in the article to be misleading at best. The author states that llamas and alpacas, “descended originally from the Camelid family.” It would be more correct to say that alpacas and llamas ARE members of the Camelid family.

In discussing the smooth coated Suri and the crimpier Huacaya varieties* of alpaca, the author states that, “Both animals grow coarse “beard” hairs, which must be removed, and the the soft wool-like hair used in yarns and fabrics.”

Oops! I had to read the above paragraph several times before I accepted the fact that Ms. Parkes is describing both Suri and Huacaya fleeces as “wool-like.” The two coats are completely different in type and, to lump them together in the minds of spinners and knitters will lead to a lot of disappointment! Suri is very similar to high quality, single coated llama fleece or kid mohair, and is suitable for worsted-type garments only. It is not “wool-like’ in the slightest.





my daughter poses with our Suri alpaca, Comet. Comet had 1 almost year of fleece growth in this photo.






my baby alpaca, Pinka with her dam, Dancer – both Huacayas The dam has about 6 months of fleece growth in this photo while cria has about 3 months.



And what's up with the author’s reference to “beard” hairs??! Alpacas have been bred for thousands of years to be single coated animals in the blanket portion of their fleeces and fiber-quality alpacas should have a very negligible amount of guard hair in their blankets. Certainly there should not be enough guard hair there to require the spinner to remove them by hand!



photo of my hands holding open Pendragon’s fleece. Note lack of "beard" hairs!




Some older, or poorly bred alpacas may have quite a bit of guard hair and these fleeces should never be sold as “alpaca fleece” or spun up into “alpaca” yarn. They would not meet the standards of the buyers of alpaca fleece and yarn and can only hurt the market for alpaca products. The Peruvians sometimes label these fleeces, “llama” when they are sold but they also sacrifice many of their older alpacas for food. They do not sell these inferior fleeces as “alpaca” and breeders in the U.S. should not be selling these either.

To misunderstand that alpacas are a single coated fiber animal, misses the entire point of their use and popularity!






close up of unadulterated alpaca fleece from my farm with one guard hair circled in red.





I wondered about the source of the author’s phrase “beard hair” instead of the term, guard hair, which is almost universally used by all alpaca and llama breeders worldwide. So, playing Kate Perez, intrepid Google Detective!, I searched Google on the term and found 2 main references to beard hair along with the word alpaca.

The first came from the book, “The Microscopy of Technical Products” published in 1907 by Thomas Franz Hanausek and translated by Andrew Lincoln Winton. On page 139 under the heading:

“Alpaca, Vicuna, Llama, Huanaco.”

Mr. Hanausek states:

“Four species of goat like animals belonging to the camel family yield hair of industrial importance. Two of these, the alpaca goat (Auchenia Paco) and the llama, (A. Lama) are domesticated, while the other two, the vicuña (A. Vicunna) and the huanaco (A Huanaco) occur only wild.”

Note: emphasis on the words “alpaca goat” is mine. The author goes on to say,

Huanaco and vicuña wool are now seldom found on the European or American market…The commercial products contain both beard hairs and wool hairs.”


I dare to hope that this book was NOT the source of the Ms. Parke’s use of the term “beard hairs” but it was the number one Google result on the day that I searched. In addition to using the word “goat” in reference to the alpaca, the genus names for all 4 animals used by the author are either incorrect or, at least, out of date.

The current genus names are: llama, (lama glama), alpaca (vicugna pacos), guanaco (lama guanicoe) and vicuña (vicugna, vicugna.) The genus name of the alpaca was changed from (lama pacos) to the current genus name in 2001 as more evidence came to light that the alpaca was descended from the superfine vicuña rather than the llama as previously thought.





Google result of seach for terms, “beard hair alpaca”





Another highly ranked Google result shown above has the term “beard hair” appearing in, “A Bestiary of Useful Fibers” by Peter Warshall, (Whole Earth Summer 1997 ) in which, Mr. Warshall states,

“The two popular cameloid wools from South America: Alpaca is high-grade — softer, finer, stronger and more lustrous than sheep wool. Alpacas coevolved with high Andes grasses, limiting globalization compared to sheep. Their slippery fibers resist dying and weaving. They can be sheared only once every two years. But, alpaca fleece contains no waste wool ("kemp") as do other wool providers. The llama is larger (sometimes twice the weight). A multi-purpose cameloid, locals love them as pack animals with the perk of harvesting a coarser, weaker wool with lots of kemp. Not a high Andes specialist, llamas have begun to spread to the mountains of the United States.”



The mistakes in the above paragraph are far less defensible than those of the 1907 technical tome because alpacas were first imported to the U.S. in 1984 and, by 1997, the printing date of the article mentioned above, there were many alpacas living in many different climates in the United States.

Mr. Warshall’s ideas about “slippery fibers” may be the result of his thinking that Suri was the main type of alpaca and his idea that either variety of alpaca has a fleece that resists dyeing is especially preposterous, but far worse is his pronouncement that alpacas can only be shorn once every two years!

It isn’t my intention to look up and argue with each and every one of the innumerable books and articles that contain misinformation about alpacas and their fleece, only to illustrate the dangers of writing any modern book or article about alpaca fleece and yarn without checking into the up-to-date sources of information and eschewing those that are too old and incorrect to be useful. It may be that neither of these was the source of Ms. Parke’s term “beard hairs.” Unfortunately she does not offer any sources for her information on the nature of alpaca fleeces.

Moving on from the beard hair issue, Ms. Parkes also claims that, “Alpaca fibers are longer than fine sheep wools, ranging in length from 4 ½ to 11 inches (11.5-28cm) or longer depending on how frequently they’ve been shorn.”

It’s hard to argue with that statement because it seems to be describing only the length of Peruvian fleeces and the shearing intervals used in Peru. However, even the most inexperienced alpaca breeder will tell you that the length of Suri fleeces differ greatly from those of Huacayas, as do the ability of each type of alpaca to go unshorn in warmer weather.

Because the Suri fleece is not as insulating as that of the Huacaya, Suris can tolerate going unshorn for longer periods. For this reason, any statement of normal fleece lengths or shearing intervals regarding alpacas should specify which type of alpaca is being referred to. In the U.S., all Huacaya alpacas should be shorn every year to avoid potentially deadly heat stroke caused by an alpaca trying to survive the summer unshorn.


Here are two more of her statements that made me wish that Ms. Parkes had made more of an effort to differentiate between Huacaya and Suri type fleeces,

“Alpaca has a smooth, dense, and lustrous hand, absorbing dye readily and reflecting it back with brilliance and luster.”

“For this same reason, any kind of ribbing in pure alpaca will be decorative only-the yarn won’t reliably keep your fabric snug.”

The words “brilliance” and “luster” are usually associated with the much smoother, shinier Suri-type alpaca fleece while the ability of the alpaca fleece to produce a snugly-fitting ribbed edge would be possible in a Huacaya-type fleece only. At least Ms. Parkes correctly asserts that alpaca fiber accepts dye well.

Having claimed that using ribbing in alpaca yarns will not produce the desired snugness, she then goes on to review specific brands of alpaca yarn and says of one in particular, “the inelastic drape of most alpaca yarns make them a poor choice for cabled or textured patterns, but this yarn (Blue Sky Alpacas Royal) would be a standout in an Aran sweater.”

Could that be because the creators of Blue Sky Alpacas Royal yarn have made some effort to use crimpy Huacaya alpaca fleeces when producing their popular alpaca yarn? I couldn’t tell from their website. I could, however, find the following photo and description here: http://www.blueskyalpacas.com/news_deta ... news_ID=54






“ Knot Hat, A Blue Sky pattern as advertised in Vogue Knitting Fall 2007. Designed by Bobbi IntVeld. Shown in Blue Sky Royal, #708 Seaglass.”



Note the use of ribbing which seems functional rather than merely decorative on the tightly-fitting hat above.



I, myself, have spun up, and knit with, many, many alpaca fleeces, of both the Suri and Huacaya variety and found that the garments that I spun and knit from Huacaya fleeces have kept their shapes quite well through several years of wear and repeated washings.

The mittens pictured below, for example, have been worn by me almost every day throughout two winters while doing horse barn chores and still fit the same way they did when I first put them on. In order to remove horsey smell and hay coverage, they have been washed many times and, while they no longer look perfect, they have completely resisted pilling and stretching.







Not as cute as Roseann's hat, but warmer than any mittens or gloves I have ever owned!



My final complaint has to do with Ms. Parke’s assertion that the word ‘royal’ in one alpaca yarn’s name is, “code for royal baby alpaca.” The last thing any of us needs is more confusion about the terminology used to express alpaca fiber diameter!

Marketing hype aside, both “baby alpaca” and the much newer term, “royal” refer to the micron count of the alpaca fiber in question. Fiber of “baby alpaca” grade often comes from adult alpacas and royal can come from adults as well. Many of the Peruvian alpaca producers also routinely label coarser alpaca fleeces, “llama.” When discussing grades of alpaca fibers and yarns, it’s best to stick to the micron designations and their grade names and leave specific animals and their ages out of it. Here is an example of the type of alpaca fiber grade chart I wish the author had used:



Royal<20

Baby 20.0-22.9

Superfine 23.0-25.9

Medium 26.0-28.9

Course 29.0-35.0

Strong >35.0

(Chart taken from Candian Camelid Fibre Cooperative)


Even then, it pays to remember that longer staple lengths=less ends in the finished yarn so a longer fleece with a slightly higher micron count can feel better against the skin than a shorter fleece with a lower micron count.


To her credit, Ms. Parkes states in her final paragraph, “No matter what the label says, remember yarns can still vary dramatically in softness and quality of presentation, even within the same fiber grade. Ideally, you want to touch the yarn for yourself to determine if it’s the right material for your intended project. “

I couldn’t agree more.:happyface;



*Though many alpaca breeders and enthusiasts refer to Suri and Huacaya alpacas as separate “breeds,” many genetic experts have pointed out that they are more correctly classified as two varieties of the same breed in the same way that some dog breeds have members with either curly or smooth coats.


PS. Yes! I am on Ravelry.comcodename: "alpacagal."






[ view entry ] ( 2194 views )   |  [ 0 trackbacks ]   |  permalink  |   ( 3 / 773 )

<< <Back | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | Next> >>