SIDNEY – A lot of farmers wouldn’t let children roam their animals’ pens and run with them in their pastures.

However, that was the scene Sunday at Misty Acres Alpaca Farm in Sidney, where the animals are docile and the farmer thrives on their positivity.

“Out of everything I’ve done in my life, I think raising alpacas is the most enjoyable and rewarding thing I’ve done,” said Noel “Red” Laliberte, the farm’s co-owner. “Alpacas are soothing to be around. If you have a day that doesn’t go well, go to the barn.”

Laliberte, 65, has raised the animals for 5 1/2 years after 30 years as a self-employed contractor. He and his wife, Connie, 49, started with 12 alpacas and they’re up to about 65 now. They breed, raise, train, shear and show them.

“Some farmers say they aren’t pets,” Laliberte said. “They’re all pets.”

The Lalibertes and others statewide opened their farms to visitors Sunday for Open Farm Day, which started in the state 23 years ago. Connie Laliberte said this was Misty Acres’ fourth Open Farm Day.

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Guests could dye alpaca fiber, peruse the farm’s shop and interact with the gentle animals. Alpacas are domesticated mammals native to South America.

Their fiber is a valuable commodity, as it’s cottony, dense and water-repellent. The farm’s shop sells clothing items and blankets made of alpaca fiber.

The Lalibertes said they make most of their money by breeding and selling animals, but they ship raw wool each year to places in the United States, Peru and Canada for spinning, carding and production.

Unlike sheep’s wool, alpaca fiber isn’t prickly and is hypoallergenic because it doesn’t have lanolin, the waxy substance wool-bearing animals secrete. Connie Laliberte said it’s four times warmer than sheep’s wool.

While some were there to see an uncommon animal, Dave and Judy McAfee of Augusta were there to pick Laliberte’s brain. They’re about to close on 64 acres on Church Hill Road on Augusta’s east side now that Dave McAfee is retired from Bath Iron Works.

They want to make most of it into lots to resell, but they said they’d like to keep 21 acres for alpacas. Laliberte was eager to share expertise, recommending starting with five to eight. Alpacas are herd animals, he said, so any fewer isn’t ideal.

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For the McAfees, raising the animals will be mostly Judy McAfee’s project. She said she researched them on the Internet before going to the Common Ground Fair in Unity, where she got hooked on the animals.

Many weren’t at the farm on business. Members of the Stein family, visiting from Virginia with three children, spent some time with the animals and bolted for the farm shop.

According to 7-year-old Katie, the family’s dog ripped the head off an alpaca stuffed animal they bought at the store last year, so they had to replace it.

“So my grandma had to, like, cut a head off of another bear and sew it on,” she said. “It kind of looks weird now.”

While she was talking, her brother, 9-year-old Johnny, was playing a game with the alpacas he said he thought up in five seconds.

“They’re trying to get away from you, but your main objective is to catch them and lightly pet them,” he said.

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The name he gave the game isn’t terribly original: “alpaca chasing.” The animals didn’t love it, but he gently wrangled a few.

John Worth and his wife, Vicki, of Chesterville, were among the first people at the farm Sunday. While in the barn chatting up Laliberte among the male alpacas, Worth compared their docile manner to his Irish setters.

He’s not far off. Many alpacas will sniff your hand if you offer it and rub their nose on you; and if you go into their pen, they’ll probably let you pet them.

Worth said he’s also interested in perhaps owning alpacas down the road.

“(I’m) just intrigued,” Worth said. “Their looks and their demeanor — just so gentle.”

Kennebec Journal Staff Writer Michael Shepherd can be reached at 621-5632 or

mshepherd@mainetoday.com

 


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