on 12-02-2020 12:21 PM
No one has started a "my sales are dead" post for a few days so I thought I'd keep the tradition going.
Anyone else suffering from a run of "lights out" at the moment? My website shop is also similarly dead. Maybe it's the time of year or maybe it's just me. How are you going?
on 18-02-2020 11:23 PM
@brerrabbit585 wrote:
Padi, I don't know whether it's worth contacting Bendigo Woollen Mills but they produce and sell alpaca yarn for knitting. They used to sell 100% alpaca but I notice what they currently sell is only 30% alpaca and 70% wool. That could be because they can't get enough alpaca or it could be because it itches like crazy for some of us and may be worse if the yarn is 100%. I never knew while I was knitting my jumper that it was going to itch when I wore it. It's okay if I have several layers of clothing underneath it but just over a blouse it's unbearable!
Have you tried selling it on ebay? 🙂 🙂 🙂
The thing with alpaca wool is that it has to be graded and skirted as soon as it shorn . My understanding is that alpacas have two types of hair. A course outer ( guard ) fibre and the soft, downy, lower micron under fibres. The course fibres need to be removed before they get mixed up with the finer fibres. The process is similar to skirting a merino fleece, but I,m not sure of the specifics.
Brerrabbit - Do you know if your fleece had this procedure done ? If not it might explain the itchyness, as course fibres are very itchy to humans.
on 18-02-2020 11:37 PM
Tippy, you've probably come across this one before and I'm sure Chamo has :-
https://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2014-11-18/auctioneer-behind-million-dollar-bale-retires/5899490
on 19-02-2020 08:42 AM
I actually visited the Appledores farm many years ago and was shown around their fine wool shedded sheep. It was a very simple operation, set up in a dissused shearing shed and made out of recycled materials. The Saxon / Merino sheep where all whethers and fed the same food ration twice a day at the same time. Each sheep was individually penned and they had the radio playing clasical music as they believed it kept the sheep calm and content.... Everything had to be very consistent to ensure no breaks in the tensile strength of the wool and the wool they produced was absolutely magic stuff. All up a very interesting excercise.
on 19-02-2020 11:40 AM
@chameleon54 wrote:I actually visited the Appledores farm many years ago and was shown around their fine wool shedded sheep. It was a very simple operation, set up in a dissused shearing shed and made out of recycled materials. The Saxon / Merino sheep where all whethers and fed the same food ration twice a day at the same time. Each sheep was individually penned and they had the radio playing clasical music as they believed it kept the sheep calm and content....
Everything had to be very consistent to ensure no breaks in the tensile strength of the wool and the wool they produced was absolutely magic stuff. All up a very interesting excercise.
That's interesting because superfine wool usually comes from "stressed" sheep. That is why superfine breeders will often run them on steep hills. They don't physically stress them out, but roaming on the hills stresses them enough to make the wool finer.
My oldest Merino got so sick about 6 years ago, he almost died. Severe lactic acidosis, which triggered a Barberpole explosion. None of the vets believed he survived (6 weeks of very intensive care on my part, around the clock). The results were, his wool broke off and fell out.,.....just what he needed in June! I'm talking pink skin bald.
When his new wool grew, it was the finest anyone had ever seen. They estimated 11-12 micron. After that, it stayed superfine, but around 14 micron. These days his wool doesn't grow as long due to advanced age, but the wool broker loves it!
on 19-02-2020 02:57 PM
on 19-02-2020 08:41 PM
@*tippy*toes* wrote:
@chameleon54 wrote:I actually visited the Appledores farm many years ago and was shown around their fine wool shedded sheep. It was a very simple operation, set up in a dissused shearing shed and made out of recycled materials. The Saxon / Merino sheep where all whethers and fed the same food ration twice a day at the same time. Each sheep was individually penned and they had the radio playing clasical music as they believed it kept the sheep calm and content....
Everything had to be very consistent to ensure no breaks in the tensile strength of the wool and the wool they produced was absolutely magic stuff. All up a very interesting excercise.
That's interesting because superfine wool usually comes from "stressed" sheep. That is why superfine breeders will often run them on steep hills. They don't physically stress them out, but roaming on the hills stresses them enough to make the wool finer.
My oldest Merino got so sick about 6 years ago, he almost died. Severe lactic acidosis, which triggered a Barberpole explosion. None of the vets believed he survived (6 weeks of very intensive care on my part, around the clock). The results were, his wool broke off and fell out.,.....just what he needed in June! I'm talking pink skin bald.
When his new wool grew, it was the finest anyone had ever seen. They estimated 11-12 micron. After that, it stayed superfine, but around 14 micron. These days his wool doesn't grow as long due to advanced age, but the wool broker loves it!
Its true that stress will trigger sheep to produce finer wool, particularly drought. This type of wool is called " hunger fine " but it comes with the risk of low tensile strength or " breaks " in the wool. A break is when the wool develops a small very weak area throughout the fleece. This is what caused your sheep to lose its wool all together. Breaks in the wool are a no no for the high end market as they need even tensile strength to produce the best fibre.
The Appledores noted in the link tested many hundreds of whethers from a commercial fine wool Saxon / Merino producer and then paid him a premium to buy the finest wooled sheep in his flock. These where then fed a moderate diet that kept them in reasonable condition, without being fat. This contributed to the fineness of the wool and the even diet ensured tensile strength.. The next step in producing the million dollar bale was to only use the wool from the front and rear legs and lower sides of the sheep as this is usually finer than the backs and neck wool. They only had a few hundred shedded sheep so it took some time to accumilate enough wool to make a bale. The sheep also wore coats to keep the wool free from dust. The Appledores farm in one of the dryer parts of the Wimmera and dust can be a problem.
on 19-02-2020 10:47 PM
Sheep, get a room you lot 😂
on 19-02-2020 11:57 PM
We have an alpaca mill local here. Their prices are pretty reasonable to process the wool, and get it back to the customer in balls of yarn if that's what they want. They say they will also process sheep wool. I enquired to get some of the Merino wool processed and sent back in balls of yarn. Wait for it...............$10,000/kg. Yes, you read that right, ten thousand per kilo. Given at that time he was giving me around 6.5kg, that was going to be a VERY expensive jumper!
Thankfully the year he lost his wool, it was about 3/4 of a years growth, so they were more than happy to buy it. It was a bit over 5" stretched. The sad thing is, despite his Italian suit quality wool (wool broker's words), he was destined to be dog food before he was a year old.
on 20-02-2020 11:18 AM
on 20-02-2020 12:24 PM