The Spinning Guy

In this blog, I'm going to talk about alpacas, fiber, spinning, and I'm going to generally try very hard to keep my readers posted about what's on my skirting board, what's on my spinning wheel, and what I'm knitting or crocheting.

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

New Mantra

Our new mantra is, "Soon". Some of you will say this is also our old mantra.

This is just a quick post as I scurry off to my day job. The lack of recent posts is mostly due to my day job. No cria yet. Yes, we're convinced there is a cria because fat just doesn't kick like that! Chloe is humming, uncomfortable, and still pregnant. Delivery is still "soon".

Sunday, May 28, 2006

Cria Watch: I Got Some Spinning Done

It rained again today and Chloe didn't have her cria today. She looks very, very close, but we saw kicking at the base of the tail today which means the cria isn't quite in position yet. Of course, none of you believe me when I say very close because I've been saying that for forty eight days now.

Tomorrow is supposed to be warmer and dry -- nice cria weather. Risë (actually Sancha) finally had her cria. Click here and here for details. Maybe Chloe can have her cria tomorrow.

In other news, I actually accomplished some spinning yesterday. I took June's advice and threw out the short strands from when I lost the end while spinning -- actually, I tossed them in my odds and ends bin for future use in an interesting novelty yarn. As of this writing, I have filled a second bobbin of two-ply black suri and started another bobbin of singles. Slow progress, but progress.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Cria Watch Day 47 Update

Maybe NOT!

The rain has settled in for the day and Chloe has chosen to settle by her favorite hay bin. It now appears a cria today is highly unlikely.

About that purple tint in the previous entry's pictures, we didn't doctor the color. I would describe Chloe's color as steel-gray with a hint of lavender. Some of the purple is due to lighting and some is due to my ancient digital camera, but most of it is normal and natural purple from Chloe's fleece.

Cria Watch Day 47: Maybe

We are now on day forty-seven of cria watch -- or day 362 of gestation. Chloe's shape has changed dramatically and we think the baby is now in position. Her left side doesn't have the huge bulge it had last week and when the baby kicks, the bulge is no longer at the base of her tail, but much closer to the delivery point. We noted some straining at the last trip to the poop pile, but Chloe is still eating and chewing cud.



Maybe today. Maybe not.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Cria Watch Day 43: Actual Spinning Content

I have the day off from my day job and it's raining sporadically -- just enough rain so I have an excuse not to do much outside unless I feel like it. I felt like working outside earlier, but I don’t feel like it now. It's the second of two days off in a row, and I finally feel like I'm starting to recover from shearing.

So I spent much of the afternoon spinning.

I'm still making slow progress on the black suri fleece I started last fall. I skeined the first bobbin of plied yarn today, and 558 yards of two-ply weighs in at exactly eight ounces unwashed. It's a dusty fleece, so I'm guessing this will end up at 1150-1300 yards per pound once it's washed. Part of my excuse for spinning so slowly on this fleece has been that I'm spinning fine yarn. Now we know I'm not spinning nearly as fine as I thought I was, so I'm now forced to admit I'm simply not spending very much time spinning.

But I didn't just make a skein of yarn I plied weeks ago.

I spun.

I was making really good progress filling the current bobbin with singles when, as sometimes happens when spinning fine singles, the yarn broke and I lost the end. Usually, I can find the end again by putting my hand on the bobbin and spinning backwards.

Not this time.

So I bent over the bobbin and started looking.

No end.

I took the bobbin off the wheel and started looking.

Nothing.

I picked a likely strand of yarn and I pulled and I got two ends. I tried to unwind the ends and they both got caught under other strands of yarn. I searched and looked for another likely strand of yarn and pulled again and got two more ends.

Suffice it to say that at this time, I have a tangled mess of short singles -- both on and off the bobbin. Most of today's progress has been removed from the bobbin. Repair and remediation of the situation will require a ball winder and patience. I'm not quite sure yet how I'll manage plying from so many short singles. They're too short to use effectively, but they represent too much effort to waste. In the past, I have grafted singles by joining a new hank of fiber between them. Depending on what I have when I finish clean-up, I might try that again.

Oh, and Chloe's cria? We're still watching.

Monday, May 22, 2006

For Two Months Now ...

For two months now, I've been promising you a cria.

Chloe hasn't delivered and it doesn't look like she'll deliver today.

"We want a cria now!" chants the blogsphere.

"Where's the spinning content? Is this really a knitting blog?" screams a voice in the back row.

"All he does is complain about how hard shearing is", yells another heckler.

"I don't think Chloe's even pregnant!" says a third. "It's all just a trick to get us to read the blog every day."

As my wife keeps telling me, babies choose to arrive when they arrive. Alpacas gestation is 345 days +/- 30. We've been through the minus thirty and we're now on plus twelve. We have eighteen more days on the plus side.

"We want the cria now!" chants the blogsphere.

Ok! Ok! Ok. So it's not Chloe's baby, but here is a cria picture.


Sindre in May 2003. Note the red-orange stain on his toenails. That's from the iodine we used to treat his umbilical cord.

And, to go with the cria picture, here are the 2006 before and after shearing pictures of Sindre.


Sindre on May 14, 2006


Sindre on May 16, 2006

Friday, May 19, 2006

How to Make Naked Aliens from Fluffy Teddy Bears

Or, Pictures of our Alpacas Before and After Shearing
(My is Google going to love that title!)


Here is Chloe before and after shearing. As you can see from the large bump on her left side, Chloe is still pregnant. This picture was taken Monday after shearing. The bump is a different shape today, but it's still there. It is now day 354 and arrival of the cria is still "soon"

The answer to yesterday's question is two different alpacas. That's Georgia on the left and her son, Donovan, on the right. The two animals really are the same color and pattern. Most of the color differences in the pictures are due to lighting and angles. Here are the same two alpacas before shearing.


Georgia on the left (or top depending on your browser). Donovan on the right (or bottom again depending on your browser). Again, most differences in color are due to lighting.

I made progress on the fleeces in the living room yesterday. I weighed all the fleeces and recorded shear weights. Donovan sheared the most total weight. Anna had the heaviest blanket and best annualized total yield.

This year's junk and coarser thirds have now been converted to garden mulch. Given the pile of fiber in the spare room and the fact this year's shearing is still in the living room, it looks like I'll have plenty of mulch for the rest of the roses. I hate to do that with fiber, but I haven't found a way to create enough value from coarse fiber to make thirds worth anything more than mulch. My time is better spent -- and it's much more fun -- making rovings and handspun from the good stuff!

Stay tuned for before and after pictures and updates on my progress reclaiming the living room floor.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

The Same Alpaca?

Yesterday's entry could well have been called "The Darker Side of Shearing." It was posted by a tired and sore Spinning Guy. Today, I'm feeling better and the animals are moving much better, so today I'm going to try to lighten things up and think positive.

In fact, we're going to involve the audience in some of the positive and humorous aspects of shearing.

The two pictures below were taken on our farm since shearing. Do you think the two pictures present the same alpaca or two different alpacas? Please leave your thoughts in the comments below. The answers will be posted tomorrow unless Chloe has her cria -- in which case the answers will be posted later.



Two pictures from after shearing at Upper Alpacas. Is it the same animal in both pictures? Please post your thoughts in the comments.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Shearing

Shearing -- at least for us -- is the hardest part of the alpaca year. Everybody talks about how much fun shearing must be and how great it is to have all this new fiber. To hear some breeders talk about it, shearing is glamorous. It's easy, it's fun, you get all this fiber. They put the happy face on it. Glamorous!

What alpaca breeders don't talk about how stressful shearing is or how physically exhausting it can be. There is a reason my posts have been rather short and terse this past week, and also a reason why there isn't -- yet -- a big description with before and after pictures on the blog. Shearing isn't glamorous. It's exhausting, dirty work.

The reason there are no pictures of the shearing process on the website is that holding an alpaca for shearing takes both hands and mental focus. There are too many distractions without thinking about the camera and I can't take my hands off the animal to push the shutter.

There are positive aspects to shearing. It is the time of year when alpaca breeders get together to help each other -- because few of us have enough hands to shear on our own. We catch up on the year's gossip and take a good look at each others' animals. The camaraderie is important in getting things done and building community.

Most of my blog readers will be focusing on all the new fiber as a positive aspect to shearing. Stash enhancement they say. Not so fast, I say. Right now, all of our raw fiber is in the living room. Yes, the living room. The fiber is in bags and the top of every bag is open to allow the fiber to breathe. I haven't looked at the fiber at all. Every single one of these fleeces needs to be skirted and gone over before processing begins. I might process many of my fleeces without washing them first, but I have to skirt them first.

Did I mention that panicked alpacas urinate on the shearing mat? Did I mention that urine gets on the fleece? That fleece got put in the garbage bag, not in with the good fleeces, but I have to go through the bags to figure out which is the garbage bag.

Meanwhile, that bag of garbage fiber is also on the living room floor airing out. Glamour anybody?

I'll just make this a very public "thank you" to Pam for her patience with me and my fiber.

I'm stiff and sore from shearing and I think every single one of my animals is as at least as stiff and sore as I am. Several are still moving like they're quite sore. I'm still stressed over shearing and I think half of our herd is still more stressed over shearing than I am.

And we use the shearer we do because she minimizes stress to both humans and animals!

Several alpaca breeders out there will speak up and say that if our shearer is making animals stiff and sore, we should use a different shearer. My answer is, "Watch your alpacas closely after shearing!"

I have worked with several different shearers at several different farms using several different shearing methods. In almost every case, the alpaca is shorn and then turned back into the pasture to be forgotten about. I've seen a bit of shearing. I also know I can see behavior in my alpacas that many breeders miss. More important, I know that Pam is extremely good at watching the alpacas and seeing small changes in motion and behavior. I'm not in her observational league, but I have learned from her. Last year, I was horrified at the limping and stiffness in our pastures after shearing. I almost changed shearers. Then, I thought about it. Last year was the first time we were in a position to watch our animals after shearing. This year, we're seeing much the same. As I think about it, if I am stiff and sore from shearing, those animals probably experience much the same thing. If I'm sore from struggling to hold them, they're probably sore from struggling not to be held. And since the method we're currently using puts the least physical stress on the holder, it might be reasonable to assume it puts the least stress on the alpaca.

But I still feel like I'm hurting my babies. It's one thing for me to hurt myself -- I like to think I'm a tough guy and I can take it. It's something else entirely to be hurting my babies. Did I say shearing was stressful?

Shearing is dirty work. Alpacas love to roll, so they are covered in dust and dirt. Alpacas sweat. This sweat mixes it with dust and dirt to make mud. If you're ever washed a fleece and seen all the mud wash off, you know what I'm talking about. Shears take oil. This oil gets on the fleece and on your hands. Alpacas don't have lanolin, but they do have body oils. These oils get on the fleece. Everything that gets on or into the fleece gets on your hands during shearing. It takes about two animals to turn my hands black and by the fourth, my face, shirt, and arms are black as well.

Shears make tiny hairs -- extremely fine tiny hairs. Wind blows these around and they stick to the gooey black mixture on your hands, arms, and face. Partially shorn alpacas struggle against you as you hold them, and the tiny hairs rub off. Think about he hairs down the back of your neck after a haircut. Alpacas have a lot more hair than you do!

Alpacas spit when they're afraid. Shearing is one time when our alpacas will take aim at us. (Injections are another.) Chances are pretty good that you'll get slimed during shearing -- and if you don't get hit by flying spit, you'll get an arm or hand in it while holding an animal. It's all part of shearing.

And it's a dirty job.

More on shearing later. I'm off to see if I can take some good after-shearing pictures today. Maybe I'll even make some progress toward enjoying some of my hard-earned stash.

Oh, and Chloe still hasn't had her baby.

Monday, May 15, 2006

Shearing is Finished

We have finished shearing for 2006. Here is proof.


Anna -- note the difference from yesterday's pictures. Yes, this is the same alpaca.

We're hot and tired, and we've had too much sun. The alpacas are hot and stressed and mostly in the shade.

And Chloe still hasn't had her cria.

Sunday, May 14, 2006

Cria Watch Day 34: Hot. Tired. No baby.

One of the great things about random retail schedules is that one can ask for a weekday off and generally not need to take vacation time. One of the downsides is that if you take a day off to do physical work, you don't have the weekend to recover.

I took Friday off to help friends shear.

I worked both days this weekend trying to keep up with the Mother's day crowd in the garden center -- the crowd won.

We're shearing here tomorrow.

I'm tired.

And I work the day job again on Tuesday.

At least we're getting these winter coats off the animals. They're very hot -- you would be too if you were walking around in a five or ten pound alpaca coat in eighty-five degree weather.

Last year we worried about cold after shearing. This year we're worrying about heat before shearing. I guess that means our timing is about right for our climate.

More on shearing if I survive tomorrow. There might even be before and after pictures if I get REALLY ambitious.

In the meantime, here's Anna and her water bucket . . .


And here she is looking very hot and pitiful . . .

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Still No Baby

We're one day past Chloe's due date and already I'm a nervous wreck. Are we sure she's really pregnant, not just fat? I have to keep telling myself alpaca gestation is 345 days plus or minus 30. Chloe is on day 346 which is only one day into the plus side. There is plenty of no cause for alarm!

Or as Pam says, "Babies arrive when they get here."

When I think about it rationally, Tess just went 379 days before delivering. Sancha is on day 360. Why am I freaking out over Chloe on day 346?

It's a good thing I have no human kids.

On second thought, maybe I'd handle this better if I did have human babies.

345 plus or minus 30.

Monday, May 08, 2006

Cria Watch Day 28: One Week Until Shearing

Our alpacas get shorn May 15th. If you're in the Roseburg, Oregon area, you are invited to watch and or help. Hopefully, Chloe's cria will arrive prior to shearing, because the little one shows no signs of arriving today.

It is beginning to look like I won't be around for the cria's birth. Today is my last relaxable day off for a long time. I get Friday off from my day job, but I'm helping friends shear at their place. I'm supposed to be helping other friends shear over the weekend, but I have to work my day job. Monday, I have off from the day job, but we're shearing here. Then the day job gets a long string of days… Such are the joys of raising alpacas around a retail-random schedule.

Friday, May 05, 2006

Cria Watch: Not Yet.

No cria yet.

If I could take decent video through three fences and two chain link gates, I would have a very cute movie of Chloe drinking from the sprinkler like a kid at a drinking fountain. It's cute! It's funny! You have to see it to believe it and if you saw it, you would laugh. Unfortunately, if I get close enough with the camera or at the right angle, I'll distract Chloe and lose the shot. All I can do is tell you about it and 99% of the humor is lost in the telling.

Thursday, May 04, 2006

Cria Watch Day 25: Spinning Wheel Questions

No cria yet. All signs point to a cria soon. As previously discussed, soon is a relative term -- particularly when dealing with alpacas.

A reader of my blog sent in some questions regarding a spinning wheel. Apparently the reader has recently acquired an old castle-style wheel which doesn't work well. The wheel is a double-drive and the problem is that the bobbin doesn't spin easily on the flyer. There is no rust, but the bobbin apparently is a tight fit. Given the situation, winding yarn onto the bobbin is a considerable challenge. My reader is seeking a solution or at least pointing in the general direction of where to look for help.

I have never used a double-drive wheel, so I don't have answers. The only answer I have is to call the Umpqua Arts Center in Roseburg, OR to get contact information for the Umpqua Spinners and Weavers Guild. This guild includes some very experienced spinners -- some with woodworking spouses. Several members collect and restore old wheels. I'm not a guild member and I don't think the guild has a website, but I'll bet somebody in the guild would have an answer.

If anyone else has thoughts or suggestions about restoring this wheel, I welcome your comments.