SCA Peruvian Shawnee Cria

new baby

A big thank you to our friends, Melissa and Ben Augustyn at Augustyn Acres for sharing this cute picture of their cria sired by our herdsire SCA Peruvian Shawnee. “Zowie!” Look at the legs on this little guy, they look like tree trunks.

Shawnee is an AOBA and a Futurity Champion. We haven’t used him as much because he is from the same Misty Maiden line as our main herdsire, SCA Peruvian Magnum. Magnum is older and we have tended to want to breed almost the entire herd to Magnum in the past couple of years. But after seeing what Shawnee has produced, we have got to give the boy more work.

Shawnee has been improving females by several generations. What he has done with average females has been no less than astounding.  He has great conformation, bone, density, with exceptional fleece characteristics. Shawnee  does extreme upgrades and he can put that “showring” look on an alpaca cria that is priceless to breeders these days.

Shawnee also has rich color genetics and sometimes throws patterns, which can lead to exciting results. Contact us for more information about special Fall breeding rates to Shawnee or any of our other herdsires at Fairhope Alpacas.

Alpaca History

Alpacas have flourished in South America for several thousand years. Alpacas have been domesticated for over 6,000 years and are among the oldest domesticated animals in the world.

Alpacas belong to the camel family Camelidae. Camelid ancestors evolved in North America 40 million years ago and migrated to South America across a Carribbean land bridge were they gradually evolved into the four species known there today: llama, alpaca, guanaco, and vicuna.

The alpacas undomesticated cousin, the vicuna

The alpaca's undomesticated cousin, the vicuna

The domestication of alpacas and the processing of alpaca fleece was a cornerstone of Incan empire which flourished until they were conquered by the Spanish. The Spaniards slaughtered 90% of the alpacas as well as the Incan people. They took the best pasture for their cattle, sheep, horses, and pigs, forcing the surviving Incan llama and alpaca herds into the highlands known as the Antiplano. There, because of their remarkability to adapt, these animals survived that harsh environment.

Suri alpaca in Peru

Suri alpaca in Peru

It was not until the mid-1800′s that alpaca fiber was rediscovered. An English wool importer, Sir Titus Salt, noticed some alpaca in his shipment of sheep’s wool from Peru. This marked the renewal of alpaca fiber as a fine textile product. For the next 100 years the British mills were the main importers of the alpaca fleece production when it was discovered and taken over by multinational corporations.

Sir Titus Salt

Sir Titus Salt

Alpacas were imported into the United States from 1984-1997. Alpacas are currently being raised in all fifty states as well as in countries around the world including New Zealand, Australia, Canada, England, Spain, France, Poland, Israel, and China.

Photo by Valerie Newell at The Green Alpaca

Meet The Latest Alpaca Cria – Red-Eye

Meet our latest baby alpaca. I call him “Red Eye” because he has the cutest red eye lashes.”
The cria’s dam, Sonyadore, sticks close while Jim corrals the little tyke.
When a new cria is born we want to be sure he is nursing. Here, Jim has made sure the dam has colostrum. (See how his hands look like he has something sticky on them? Good colostrum is thick and sticky.) Jim is trying to help the cria get positioned up under his mom’s teats to nurse.
The cria may “miss” a few times, and try to nurse mom’s chest and poke through her legs like above, but he’ll get it. Sometimes it takes minutes, sometimes it takes hours for babies to get the hang of it. Occasionally they need humans to bottle feed them if it takes them too long to figure it out, but most alpaca babies “get it” if you are patient with them.
Alpaca dams are generally good moms to their cria. Most experienced dams with a healthy cria will require little intervention from breeders. Monitoring cria weight gains and vaccinations are required, but the cria’s mom will take over and raise her cria for the next six months or so.
For more on newborn alpacas and nursing, read: