FREE ALPACA FLEECE!!!!
Imagine getting an email that offers you free alpaca fleeces!! I got such an email and replied of course I will take the fleece!
Upon sending that email I realized I knew nothing about prepping alpaca fleece for spinning (or any other fleece for that matter.)
Off I went to research. I read books. I watched videos. I researched. I got confused. I was anxious about what I would do with it. So many ways and so much conflicting information. The fleece arrived. Six large black garbage bags full! I was in heaven. It felt wonderful! I had visions of beautiful fiber coming off my spindles.
Getting the bags in my trunk was so much fun. Then sneaking them in the house before I could tell my husband what I had done. It was a great adventure and my husband (who really is very supportive of my fiber habits) was shocked when he saw how much there was.
Now came the real adventure................................learning what to do with it.
I started by donning rubber gloves to pick the vegetable matter (VM) out of the fleece. That should really be done in a very well lit area and preferably outside! There are tools to help you with this but I chose not to go that route at they were expensive.
Now I needed something to wash it in and something to dry it on. I found net bags meant for delicate washables and used those to wash my fleece in. Several books, articles and videos recommended them as the best way to keep your fleece together.
We have an old fashioned wash tub in the basement. Perfect for washing the fleeces. Get the water as hot as you can. Put several inches of water in it so the bags are able to be submerged. Several references said to squirt a couple of tablespoons of Dawn dish detergent in the water and swish it around. No bubbles wanted. Submerge the bags and let them sit for 30 minutes.
Squeeze the water out of the fleece in the bags. Set aside. Drain the dirty water out of the tub and fill again with the hottest water that will come out. Put the bags back into rinse them. Just 5 minutes for this step. I repeated 2-3 times until the rinse water was pretty clear.
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1st rinse only
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Now its time to take the fleece out of the bags and lay them out to dry.
I also have a half circle of chicken wire that I use to dry the fleece on (picture the next time we have a pretty day to dry fleece. ) It really has to be a pretty day and it needs to be warm. Alpaca fleece are like really thick hair. It takes time to dry out!
But it is so worth the wait!
There is still VM that has to come out at times but this is a learning process.
I can spin from this type of preparation . I also card some of it to make it easier to spin. I am trying my hand rolags but so far I am not doing great at them. Think small tree branches verses chunky pencil! But I am having a blast!
I have nature colors of white, honey, brown and black.
I have learned a lot but there is so much more to know. I know I am having fun and learning lots.
What will I make?
More yarn of course!