ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::All

Weave of the Gods: The Real-Life Golden Fleece

Author : Peter Blinn

Paleontologists tell us the camel family arose in the North American Great Plains about 45 million years ago. One group took the Bering land bridge into Asia to establish the populations of Bactrian camels and dromedaries, while the other chose the southern route through Panama when that land bridge rose from the sea about 3 million years ago. Several of those species prospered in South America, including the guanaco, vicuña, Lama owenii, and Lama gracilis.

Ancient humans likely witnessed the extinctions of the latter two but, according to prevailing wisdom, bred the domesticated alpaca from the vicuña and the llama from the guanaco. They prized the fleeces of all four, but to them the most precious and magical was that of the vicuña.


Type Microns
-------------------
Vicuña 6-13
Chiru 7-9
Alpaca 10-28
Merino 12-20
Cashmere 15-19
Guanaco 16-18
Llama 20-40
Chinchilla 21
Human 15-200

As you can see from the table above, only the chiru, a gravely endangered Asian antelope which is legally off-limits, rivals the fineness of its cinnamon-colored wool. Beyond that, vicuña is exceedingly rare due to the amimal's small size (about 90 lbs, yielding only 6-8 ounces of fleece every two or three years), its obstinacy (supremely evasive and disinclined to eat or reproduce in captivity), its death-defying habitat (greatly surpassing 14,000 feet or 4300 meters) and the cashmere-like fragility of its fiber. If you were to own, say, a pair of trousers made of pure vicuña, they'd look and feel heavenly but unless you resolved never to sit down in them you would quickly wear through the seat. To strengthen it or make it go further, the Incas would often blend their vicuña fiber with that of the viscacha, an Andean rabbit-like animal; but in any case by law only their royalty could wear such exquisite fabric.

In 1958 vicuña was on everybody's lips. President Eisenhower's favorite golfing buddy and Chief of Staff Sherman Adams got the boot after reporters learned that he had accepted various sumptuous finery, most famously a vicuña coat, from a certain Boston textile magnate named Bernie Goldfine in exchange for some extra lenient treatment by federal regulators. The scandal even engulfed future columnist Jack Anderson, who was caught bugging Goldfine's hotel room.

Since as far back as the Spanish conquest, hunting and poaching has been stressing the vicuña to the brink of extinction. By the 1970s there were only a few thousand left. But thanks to vigorous conservation measures undertaken toward the end of the 20th century, most significantly on the part of the Peruvian government, their populations have recovered. In 2002 the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service reclassified the vicuñas of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile and Peru from endangered to threatened and legalized exports from those four countries, subject to stringent documentation, for the first time in decades.

To the impoverished paisanos in the high Andes this new industry shows great promise. They've revived an ancient tradition called the chaccu that involves much singing, dancing, and feasting. Hundreds link hands and create a living human fence to gradually encircle the vicuñas and herd them into pens. There they shear the animals, sometimes tag them, and then turn them loose. The per-ounce price of this ethereal fiber spans a wide range from $10.00 wholesale (raw) to $250.00 or so retail. A coat like Sherman Adams's might cost $20,000.00 nowadays. The firms Loro Piana, Lanificio Agnona, and Incalpaca handle this sort of highflying yet eco-friendly couture and market it through outlets like Nieman Marcus. But mercifully you can also find such things as scarves and shawls, using vicuña blended with other fibers, for $200.00 or less. So far there are very few legitimate sources for this species beyond those mentioned above, but among them the Gaucho Shop (http://www.gauchoshop.com" target=new>www.gauchoshop.com) stands ready to take your order. And besides llama, vicuña blends, and other wearables they also carry yerba matë -- a relaxing tea-like drink that has practically become a way of life in much of Latin America.





About The Author


Peter Blinn is a Web developer, writer, and veteran Hollywood animator who can be reached through the "Contact Me" link at http://www.CuriousNotions.com/index1.html" target=new>www.CuriousNotions.com/index1.html

The article above comes from the Sui Generis "Curious Thing of the Week" archives section at http://www.CuriousNotions.com" target=new>www.CuriousNotions.com

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Lower Your Veterinarian Costs And Increase the Longevity of Your Pets Lives By Doing Natural Prevent
  2. How You Can Prevent Your Puppy From Jumping On People, Tugging The Leash And Roaming Around Dangerou
  3. The Other Ways To Reward And Keep Your Dog Motivated Other Than Food And How To Keep Your Dog To Sta
  4. Dog Training - Discover What Training Is The Best Way And Foundation To Accomplish Many Types Of Dog
  5. Your Pet's Health - What Every Pet Owner Should Know
  6. Your New Puppy: Must Haves For Your Dog
  7. Your Cat's First Vet Visit
  8. You Can't Fool A Horse
  9. "You Are The Greatest Teacher"
  10. Wooden Bird Cages
  11. Why The Horse's Eye's Are So Important When Training
  12. Why Pet Odor & Pet Stain Removal Products Works Only Sometim
  13. Why Contract the Services of a Professional Pet Sitter for Y
  14. Who's Fault Is It When The Horse Has A Bad Habit?
  15. White Spot (Ichthyophthirius) in Tropical Fish
  16. Where's the Meat in my Pets Food?
  17. What's The Best Dog Toy For Your Adult Dog?
  18. What You Should Know About Your Puppy And Play Biting
  19. What you Need to Know about Cat Food
  20. What Are Bottom Water Tropical Fish?
  21. Weave of the Gods: The Real-Life Golden Fleece
  22. Weaning A Bottle Fed Kitten
  23. Unpacking And Acclimatizing Your New Discus Fish
  24. Understanding the Language of a Pet Bird
  25. Tumors in Tropical Fish
More related feeds
Weave of the Gods: The Real-Life Golden Fleece
Paleontologists tell us the camel family arose in the North American Great Plains about 45 million years ago. One group took the Bering land bridg.

Weave of the Gods: The Real-Life Golden Fleece
Paleontologists tell us the camel family arose in the North American Great Plains about 45 million years ago. One group took the Bering land bridge into Asia to establish the populations of Bactrian camels and dromedaries, ...

Weave of the Gods: The Real-Life Golden Fleece
Weave of the Gods: The Real-Life Golden Fleece by: Peter Blinn Paleontologists tell us the camel family arose in the North American Great Plains about 45 million years ago. One group took the Bering land bridge into Asia to establish ...

Weave of the Gods: The Real-Life Golden Fleece
Weave of the Gods: The Real-Life Golden Fleece. by: Peter Blinn. Although this is a fantastic article, I regularly get startled if it assists persons in any way. The material is meant to cater to those people who were all hot for dog ...

Bug's Bleat - - GCF: Quantum Date
On a large cookie sheet, weave strips into a lattice large enough to cover each pot pie. Brush beaten egg onto each lattice square. Bake for 5 minutes, or until dough has risen and turned light golden brown. ...

Spirits in Bondage by Lewis, CS
If as God's his eyes could see. All the wizardries of God- Slaying matter with a nod, Charming spirits with his rod, With the singing of his voice Making lonely lands rejoice, Leaving us no will nor choice, Drawing headlong me and you ...

one big thread...
I've never sugar-coated the fabric, or tried to weave a prettior pattern to please people who are so easily dissillusioned. I'm grumpy because I use the original artpiece instead of the one that's been edited and rewoven with different ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved