D'Lux Meadow Alpacas

Luxury Alpaca Fiber Grown for Handspinners by a Handspinner

DLUXMDW Padre's Mojo Mochalico

Mojo's Surprise Cria!

Alpaca , Suri , Jr. Herdsire (Male) |Unproven |Dark Brown

AOA# 36098248 | DOB: 9/24/2021 (3 yrs)

Sire: Fiore's Padre Pio

23.0 AFD @ 13 Years Old!

Fiore's Padre Pio

Suri Herdsire (Male) Beige

AOA# 31363594 DOB: 9/27/200816 yrs
Padre is our favorite adult male. He is the alpha of the male herd despite being the smallest at 160 lbs. He is also sweet, kind, and easy to handle. Padre’s staple length is only 4 inches, and he doesn’t produce a lot of fleece so we jacket him in the coldest weather, but he has maintained amazing fineness and luster into his teens. Padre is a grandson of legendary herdsire CPeruvian Accoyo Jackpot, whose genes flow through the Goldstar, Belmonte, and Kaden lines In October 2020 we ...
  | AOA# 31363594 | Beige
Dam: Mojolica

17.2 AFD @ Almost 5 Years Old!

Mojolica

Suri Open (Female) Bay Black

AOA# 31959933 DOB: 8/18/200915 yrs
Mojo is registered as a dark brown but she is a solid bay black. And she has blue eyes. And extremely fine fiber, which is rare in blacks. Her AFD at 20 months of age was 19.1, at 4 years, 8 months old, her AFD was 17.2 and she still posted an AFD of 27.8 at 12 years, 8 months of age. Mojo has short (4 inch) staple length and zero lock structure, so she will never win a halter show; but her fiber has such velvety soft handle that it is an absolute joy to spin. The resulting yarn is a warm ...
  | AOA# 31959933 | Bay Black
$1000.00
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Details
Mocha was our Surprise! Baby. We had tried unsuccessfully for three years to get Mojo pregnant with several different males. Finally in early October 2020, we paired her with our own Padre Pio (who is a very good breeder) even though the color match wasn’t our first choice. The breeding seemed to go fine (as may others had previously) but when we spit tested her a week later, she didn’t react. No spitting, no shrieking, no running away. She just stood there, eating hay. A week later, we spit tested her again. Still nothing. After three years, we concluded it just wasn’t going to happen, so we decided to not breed her further and just enjoy her fiber and company (she’s a really sweet girl.)

Fast forward to mid September 2021. We went on our usual 5 day vacation between two of the reenactments Beth does every year, and when we returned on Friday afternoon Mocha was in the process of being born. Both his legs were out, but his head hadn’t made an appearance, so we called our vet. She spent about a half hour getting his head in the correct position and shortly thereafter, we had a 16 pound dark brown cria with black nose, ears and legs. We thought about naming him Providence (because if he’d been born a day earlier, we would probably have lost both him and Mojo), but we settled on Mocha for his coloring.

Oh, and lessons learned: we now always do a progesterone test before we determine that a female we’ve bred is not pregnant.

Mocha grew like a weed and at 15 months, weighed 148 pounds. He’s exactly what you would expect from the offspring of a Jackpot grandson and a MacGyver granddaughter: a tall, rangy male with long lustrous locks. He is not as fine as we would have anticipated given his parents (he’s a Grade 2) but we hope that he inherits the fineness longevity of his parents: Mojo still had a 17 micron fleece at nearly age 6 and Padre had a 19 micron fleece at age 7 (he still has 23-24 micron fiber in his teens). His color (brown) doesn’t make him an ideal fit for our breeding program, but he carries the genes of two of our favorite animals.

Updated 6/24/2024