Thursday, May 13, 2010

Days 15-17: shearing pictures

Howdy All! Sorry I vanished for a bit, there. I'm not used to working outside 12-13 hours a day, and shearing took more out of me than I imagined. And I wasn't even a part of the actual shearing! I can't imagine how tired everyone else was.

Here are some images I took from the hayloft on Day 1. This was the first animal sheared, and all the new people got to go up and watch. 

1. As you can see, the alpaca is on a table. This is a special table that tilts vertically. The alpaca is led to the table, and it takes 4-6 people to line it up, hold rear legs, hold front legs, hold head/neck, wrap a tummy harness (like when they lift horses) around it, and then TILT it into horizontal position. Lots of coordination required there.




2. This is after the first side is done, and the animal is FLIPPED (literally) to do side 2. You can see the leg ropes. One tie goes around each leg, and is secured to the table. There is still a person at each set of legs, in the middle, and at the head. 


3. Vacuum the Alpaca!! Yes indeedy, that thar alpaca gets shop-vacced. (new verb)
This gets out a lot of dust/grass/random bits of stuff. A lot, but not ALL. Very dusty process.


4. Closer shot of ShopVac! 


5. Actual shearing. This is certainly a skill. This shearer did 20 animals a day. You should see her forearms! She has a full time 'real' job, and has to work out her arms all year to stay strong. I was impressed. That was some hard work. 

Each animal takes about 20-30 minutes to shear. There is a designated 'fleece gatherer' who removes the 'blanket' fleece and keeps the table/animal clean so the shearer can work. You can see how the blanket is folded back as the shearer makes each row cut.



6. AHHHH!!! Poor naked alpaca! The legs are trimmed down mostly to keep flies from biting the animal. They do not use the fiber, it's usually too coarse and dirty, and too short. 

You can see how everyone still has hands on the animal. They are not really gripping tightly, but if you let up, the animal tries to get free. If there is a really wriggly animal, everyone sort of stretches across it until it calms down. Kinda like wrestling, but with a wriggling, sometimes screaming, sometimes spitting alpaca. Doesn't happen that much, though.



7. This is the only time in the calendar year the animal is restrained, so whatever else needs to be done gets done. They all got their toenails trimmed, they all got weighed. At least one that I saw got his teeth flossed. THAT was a procedure, requiring quite a few people, and he was NOT at all happy. 



8. A spitter, this one. Most animals don't actually spit, though. Some were quite calm. But they all have personalities, and this one was expressing herself, and her displeasure at being harnessed, tied to a table and sheared. I'd probably spit too. They use towels to protect all the workers from her ire. 
All towels are THROWN out. There's just no cleaning that nastiness. And it does stink. 




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