Alpacas are a domesticated, social species that live in herds. Although they originated in Peru, they have now spread worldwide in human care. Although they share similar characteristics and are often mistaken for one another, alpacas and llamas are different species! There are four South American camelids: the alpaca and the llama, both domesticated, and the vicuña and the guanaco, both wild species that diverged from a common ancestor around 2 million years ago.| Zoo Atlanta
Cozy yarn is a light worsted weight yarn, spun precisely to find a balance of softness and strength and perfect for heirloom alpaca blankets, sweaters, and scarves.| Yarnalia
Mohair is popular for knitting soft, fuzzy sweaters, but it isn't always perfect. Here's an overview of a good mohair yarn substitute.| A Bee In The Bonnet
This is a free knitting pattern for a scarflet or mini scarf knit in sport-weight yarn and a simple garter stitch texture.| A Bee In The Bonnet
Suri Alpacas are members of the camel (camelid) family of South America. Their ancestors originated on the central plains of North America about 10 million years ago. These llama-like ancestors migrated south to what is now South America and evolved into primitive examples of today’s Guanaco and Vicuna. By the end of the last ice age (10,000-12,000 years ago), Camelids no longer existed in North America. It is believed that alpacas were domesticated from the wild vicuna in the Andean highla...| surinetwork.org
As the name would suggest, Berroco Ultra Alpaca is ultra-soft and ultra-fun! This worsted-weight yarn is offered in a gorgeous range of solid and variegated colors giving you endless shade opportunities. Made out of 50% wool and 50% alpaca, Berroco Ultra Alpaca will glide across your needles and hooks, working up into| Jimmy Beans Wool