Saturday, March 26, 2016

George training his pack llama

Our llama cria running

Our llama cria running 12 weeks old

Maggie the Cria Uses a Ramp

Maggie, our 4 week old, bottle baby, llama cria uses a ramp to get on and off the porch. Stairs are too tricky for her, but a ramp works great.

Meet Nigel - Wallowa Llamas Pack Trips in Eastern Oregon

wallowallamas.com llama pack trips in Eastern Oregon

llama trekking in Utah narrows

llama packing in Utah with llama2boot

Putting the pack saddle on your llama

Placement, fitting and cinching, including breastplate.

Pack saddles, when well-designed and properly fitted, are quite comfortable for a llama to wear and carry weight with for long periods of time. However, even the best-designed saddle can cause serious discomfort and permanent physical damage to a llama if that saddle is placed and fitted incorrectly — even if little or no weight is carried, and even if the period of time seems short to the human (who is not wearing the pack!).

It's our job to make sure that any pack saddle fits comfortably and stays in place humanely each and every time we saddle up our llamas. Llamas have incredibly good memories, and even a single, short experience — if unpleasant enough — can lead them to associate discomfort with pack saddles for a very long time afterwards.

Although this video is ten minutes long, the actual process of saddling a llama correctly and carefully takes vastly less time, particularly after the saddle cinches and straps have been properly fitted to the individual llama.

The basic principles shown apply to ALL saddles and ALL llamas (including llamas shorn to the skin for showing). Please understand that this video could not include the breeching, other saddle makes, other llamas, or many details of saddle selection due to YouTube video length constraints. For complete, detailed information on llama pack saddles and saddle fitting, please go to www.llamaprints.com for the publication, "Evaluating a Llama Pack for Comfort and Function" by Gwen Ingram.

Llama training

Rosselli in training with a saddle pack. Llama training at Spring Farm Alpacas, East Sussex. For more llama antics follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

Llama cria 30 minutes old at StoneBridge Farm.

Llama cria 20 minutes old up and walking after just being born at StoneBridge Farm. She is a bit unsteady at first, but within an hour she is fine.

FULL ARGENTINE MINIATURE LLAMA CRIA w/ APPALOOSA markings!!!!

All cria this year were sired by: VML'S ARJENTO ARGENTINE an ILR and AMLA registered Full Argentine miniature llama sire standing here at: www.valleyminiaturellamas.com &

www.valleystables-exotics.com

Feeding the baby llama!

Llama Haltering Problems

I DO APOLOGISE for the sound quality of this clip. I tried to do a voice-over, but it is muffled. The gist of the film is that I am sharing the haltering problems that I seem to have a monopoly of, with anyone else that might have them. If you subscribe to my videos, you may know that my main interest is hands-off (off lead) training of llamas. It sometimes seems to me that as my hands-off work improves, my hands-on work, like haltering, weakens. Could there be a connection? Any ideas on this anyone..if you've done any operant conditioning of camelids?

Anyway, I think this clip more than redresses the balance of the clips that tend to show up my more successful aspect of llama training.

And I've put in a few ideas of things that have helped me with haltering on the occasions that I've managed to do it.

Dare I think that there are more people out there who have haltering problems than admit to it!!!

The mystery to me is why my llamas should all be completely easy to halter until round about three years of age. After that? Is it something to do with restraint..or unconnected?

I feel that haltering by overpowering is acceptable, and sometimes necessary. Indeed, I see it often with surprisingly few negative reactions from the llama but it is not what I, as a llama trainer, should be doing. I should be able to stand and slip it on a quiet, accepting llama.

And I knbow Marty McGee (for whom I have great admiration) halters using extended poles, wands and stuff and this is fine and useful...but I still want to do it ..well...do it quietly and without using anything but the halter, my voice and a few treats!

Mangosta enana cría buscando a su madre, Lago Mburo, Uganda

Una mangosta enana cría llama buscando a su madre en el lago Mburo, Uganda. ¡Finalmente la encontró!