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Farmer survives llamas’ ups and downs

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Published: November 14, 2002

RAYMOND, Alta.- Sue Wilde has been in the llama business for 16 years

and has loved every minute.

She converted her family’s mixed farm into a llama ranch and built her

herd to 70 animals, finding new ways to market her products.

She is among Alberta’s llama elite and has traveled unscathed over the

peaks and valleys of the livestock industry. When the market dips

became discouraging, Wilde looked for innovative ways to make her

animals pay their way.

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“People should realize there is still great potential out there for

most of the animals they have,” she said. “They are just not working

with the system.”

Her prize llamas become breeding stock, but she also sells pets, guard

animals, yarn and meat. Manure goes to the neighbours for their gardens.

Raised with cattle on the family farm near Raymond, Wilde got her first

taste of diversification with German shepherd dogs 25 years ago. She

trained them and travelled to Germany for new stock. The Calgary City

Police canine unit was a client.

She was an early adopter of llamas and along with other neophyte

breeders learned about these South American animals through experience.

Based on Bolivian, Peruvian and Chilean genetics, the North America

llama has become a unique product, but it took work among breeders to

develop the modern animal.

“When I got started, every ugly, walking llama was $20,000 and up, but

that is not the way anymore.”

However, today’s higher quality animals are not selling for the same

high dollars paid 10 years ago. Better animals still fetch a good

price, but the common stock is more reasonable.

Wilde sold 25 animals off the farm this year that included herd sire

prospects as well as pets.

People have to accept that they may not be able to buy the most

expensive sires, but stud service is available to upgrade herds.

Artificial insemination is not widely used.

“It’s just like horses or cattle. You have a few good stallions or a

few good bulls and a lot of geldings and steers.”

She tells new breeders to develop a plan, accept there will be risk and

understand that not every animal is going to be a sale highlight.

“I always tell people to make sure it is money you can afford to throw

away.”

Yarn and clothing made from llama fibre is a high-end market for

breeders like Wilde.

Along with a friend, she sends raw fleece to one of two mills in

Alberta and has found a company to make llama wool socks.

Knitters can buy 100 gram skeins of yarn for $15.

To be a serious industry, North American llama and alpaca owners need

mills that are prepared to buy the fibre and handle the sales, rather

than leaving individuals responsible for their own marketing. Wilde

said Peruvian llama farmers have already reached this level. Fibre is

paid for when it’s delivered and the mill handles processing and sales.

South American women have formed co-operatives so they can work

together to knit and weave a range of garments. Most of the yarn and

knitted clothing items sold in Canadian stores are Peruvian imports.

To produce a better quality fibre, breeders like Wilde are developing

an animal with suri-type fibre. These animals grow fibre in long,

curling tendrils with a better lustre and crimp so garments hold their

shape.

The old-fashioned type of animal with a fluffy, full coat can be bred

to the suri-type males and produce the finer fibre.

“This is the type that is really commanding the big dollars,” Wilde

said.

Unfortunately, some animals do not make the cut and breeders are forced

to make decisions.

Along with a partner, Wilde formed Amigo Meats to deal with two- to

three-year-old nonbreeding males. The meat is processed locally and

sold at farmers’ markets. The partners had sales of about $200 a week

this summer.

The meat looks and tastes like beef, but getting rid of offal and heads

is an obstacle because renderers don’t want to handle them.

Her llamas have taken her as far away as Peru for a world conference

and to farms across North America. That included hauling llamas to

Virginia for a pet therapy program and annual visits to the

international show and sale in Oklahoma City each year, the Mecca for

camelid producers.

Exports to the United States are simple, but problems remain with

importing new lines north because of concerns with quarantine and

testing requirements for brucellosis, tuberculosis and, in some states,

bluetongue.

Being treated as livestock has been a plus for the industry. There is

no goods and service tax and it is recognized as an agri-cultural

commodity.

Yet many have remained in the industry because the animals charm them.

“If you stay passionate about what you have, it stays alive,” she

said.”As soon as the passion is gone, so is what you have.”

About the author

Barbara Duckworth

Barbara Duckworth

Barbara Duckworth has covered many livestock shows and conferences across the continent since 1988. Duckworth had graduated from Lethbridge College’s journalism program in 1974, later earning a degree in communications from the University of Calgary. Duckworth won many awards from the Canadian Farm Writers Association, American Agricultural Editors Association, the North American Agricultural Journalists and the International Agriculture Journalists Association.

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