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Date: 2005-12-16 03:52 pm (UTC)Yak with Red Ball in Snow.
Date: 2005-12-16 04:31 pm (UTC)Coinkidinkally, I have been washing yak tail fiber this morning in preparation of sending it off with a shipment of assorted fibers to Pixar.
Speaking of which, do you have any unique animal fibers from your workplace that you might want to include? Pixar wants to add to their fiber library--no pelts please, just fiber shorn or plucked (gently) from living animals--and I'll be sending out a box of goodies to them right after the new year. The fibers don't need to be washed (I'll take care of that, as I have the set-up to do it) but they should be somewhat cohesive rather than a tangled mess.
Let me know.
Yak!
Date: 2005-12-16 04:32 pm (UTC)Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-16 04:58 pm (UTC)Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-16 04:59 pm (UTC)Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-16 05:45 pm (UTC)Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-16 06:05 pm (UTC)I noticed on the Web site, it says that the balls are "resistant, but not impervious" to scratches and gouges. How often does the zoo have to buy replacement balls? I see the larger ones aren't exactly cheap! Is there a "ball replacement fund"?
Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-16 10:01 pm (UTC)Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-17 01:05 am (UTC)Re: Yak with Red Ball in Snow.
Date: 2005-12-17 05:28 am (UTC)Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-17 01:43 pm (UTC)Interesting. We do that with our llamas to keep them from bolting their grain, which is a common problem with llamas and alpacas called "choke". Would you do it for the yak for the same reason, or strictly for enrichment?
Re: Yak with Red Ball in Snow.
Date: 2005-12-17 01:44 pm (UTC)Depends. What's a glidder? And does the glidder fiber naturally shed or is it shorn?
Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-17 11:28 pm (UTC)I love llamas, and alpacas are the cutest things EVER!! We don't have them here, though.
Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-18 12:43 am (UTC)Yeah, our feeders are not on the ground but at about 48 inches up. It's more of a greedy eater problem rather than a location issue. Switching our feeding program to crimped whole grains (rather than pelleted feeds) helped, and putting a heavy fist-sized ball in each feeder to slow them down also made a difference.
Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-18 12:56 am (UTC)Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-18 01:22 pm (UTC)Right now, we've only got two so they are fed in the same area but with separate feed bins. With six, you're wise to give 'em some space from each other.
Most non-breeding llamas don't need ANY grain, except as a light supplement during the super-cold snaps; camelids have such efficient rumen that they really only need hay, grass, and minerals for the greater portion of the year. There are an awful lot of overweight llamas out there, according to Dr. Steve Purdy (our east-coast camelid specialist) and an awful lot of llamas that are seriously mineral defficient, particularly in selenium, which our North American soils do not have in abundance unlike the llamas' and alpacas' native soils.
Earlier this year, we had to put down a 23-year-old llama who was very near and dear to our hearts. He'd been rescued at age 10 from an abuse situation and was with us for 13 years. Bry was on a grass and pelleted-grain diet all those years, because his teeth had been smashed by his first owner so he couldn't eat hay. As Bry entered his extreme senior years (20+), we did put him on a higher-protein pelleted horse diet to keep the weight on him. With extreme age, high protein intake rather than high fiber intake is usually more important.
We also found that Bry needed an iron supplement above and beyond anything he'd get in his pelleted feeds. With a senior camelid, it's important to have at least once-yearly full blood analysis to find out what's going on.
Are you supplementing with a camelid-formulated dry, loose mineral mix?
Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-18 10:23 pm (UTC)Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-19 01:09 pm (UTC)I'm glad the keeper was "enlightened" by the others. Our old Bry was disfigured about the mouth, too, and I used it as an opportunity to explain about animal abuse when folks would see him and react negatively to his facial appearance.
It sounds like Coya is in a good place for an old llama to be.
Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-19 02:57 pm (UTC)Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-19 03:17 pm (UTC)Do you blanket Coya? We found that to be very effective for Bry, particularly as he was a Ccara llama. I made a blanket for Bry for $15 ($5 for the old Coleman polyfill sleeping bag from the Goodwill, $10 for strapping, velcro, and buckle closures from JoAnn Fabrics) that was fabulous. It's a great design that someone on the camelid listservs came up with years ago especially for the senior animals.
Kodiak is a Lanuda type, and Kimchi is a Tapada type, so they generally are unblanketed unless we shear early and get a late spring cold snap.
For more on llama types:
http://www.llamas.co.uk/Pages/llama%20types.htm
Umm, where is that?
Re: Yak!
Date: 2005-12-19 04:38 pm (UTC)