How To Make Felt Soap

One of my favorite things to do with raw fiber is to felt soap. Not only is it a fun activity for both kids and adults but you get a usable product that everyone can enjoy. Felted soap also makes great stocking stuffers or toppers for gifts.

I’ve taken photos of the felting process with instructions along the way. Should you have any questions or would like to purchase raw fiber to felt your own soap send me an email or visit our Farm Store.

Some tips for your finished soap:

Should your soap get too dry and not suds up any more run it under warm water and place the wet soap in a Ziploc bag and run in your hands until the suds start flowing again.

If you’ve finished your bar and the soap is all gone the felted part is still usable! With the soap missing the felt now has a pocket in the center where the bar of soap used to be. You can cut one of the ends off and use the felted pouch to house jewelry, cell phones, change or whatever else you can think of!

Happy felting!

As always check out other fiber projects at Alpaca Farm Girl’s Fiber Arts Fridays!

Bat in the Bathroom

We had a little bat stuck in the bathroom this morning. I scooped him up in a plastic container and took him outside. It wasn’t until after I let him go that I remembered to get the camera. It turns out that bats are contortion artists. This little guy managed to squeeze into a check in the log! To give you an idea of the size of the check the mark on the log above it is from a chainsaw.

Hopefully the little guy is ok and the cat didn’t hurt him in anyway. We like bats around here, help keep the mosquitoes and other biting bugs in check.

How much does it cost to care for an alpaca?


When writing a business plan for your new alpaca adventures the ultimate question is what does it cost to care for an alpaca per year?   The truth is a lot more than what you’re really thinking about but we’ll get into that later.  What most folks want to know is the bare bones after the big one time purchases.   

The following numbers are based on what it cost me to care for 1 alpaca in 2008. A few things about our farm; animals are on full pasture for 6 months of the year and on hay for the winter. Our water buckets are heated in winter and fans are on 24/7 in the summer.  The numbers were broken down to literal cost per head.  For example:  If I bought a box of 100 syringes for $20 but only used 14 syringes on 1 animal that year the cost per head = $3.

Cost per head per year in Western NY for 2008:

Hay: $38.50
Grain: $30
Minerals: $4
Wormer: $24
Rabies: $20
CD&T: $2
Syringes: $3
Vet Misc: $30
Heated Water (electric): $20
Summer Fans (electric): $10
Shearing: $25
Teeth: $10
——————–
Total: $216.50

Sounds like you could make a profit on that right?  I know what you’re thinking.  Alright! All I have to do is sell 1 female alpaca and poof massive profit!  It’s time to think a bit harder before you get too excited.  Remember you have to think of your start up costs too.  Cost of the livestock, property, buildings, fencing, electric, trash, water, equipment, gas, marketing, fiber processing, show fees, travel, and the list just goes on and on and on.   Don’t panic!  It’s not that bad since anything farm related has a nice tax benefit to it.   Also, the # of animals you have depends on your cost per head.  The more animals you have the lower cost per head.  It’s always much more expensive to care for 1-2 animals than it is 20-30.  The Vet charges per visit not per head!  You’re also running fans, heating water, buying supplies that expire before you can use them, etc for 1 animal or 20.   Right now our cost per head is pretty high since we only have 8 alpacas so all of my expenses are divided by 8.   Some of the larger farms I’ve talked to claim they have managed to get their cost per head down to $65-75.   Efficiency is the key.

The best thing to do before your first purchase is to be prepared.  On farm visits ask tons of questions and write down everything!  Talk to accountants, and constantly reference your business plan to make you stay on course.  Alpaca ownership can be very rewarding and comfortably profitable.  Like with any new business it does take time to settle in and make a profit.  The best thing about alpaca ranching is you can easily keep a full time job while managing your foundation herd until the investment starts to turn a profit.  Many alpaca farms I visited still keep that full time day job and the ones that opted to fully give up the rat race managed to leave in 3-5 years.

See Our Other Posts!
 Starting an Alpaca Farm: New Buyers Guide
Agisting Vs Farm Ownership
Alpaca and Taxes

How To Felt Beads with Alpaca


This year I bought with me bags of colorful alpaca fiber on our vacation to the Adirondacks after my sister-in-law inquired about making felted beads.   Our adventures in making alpaca felted jewelry turned out to be quite entertaining especially after a few beers or glasses of wine.
 

Supplies:
– Dawn Original Dish Soap
– Bottle of hot tap water
– Shoe tray
– Towels
– Carded Fiber

Supplies
Supplies

Method:
To make beads is very simple.  Pinch off some raw fiber, pour some warm soapy water on it and start gently rubbing in the palm of your hand to form a ball.  (NOTE: learning to felt with wool is easier than alpaca for beginners)

Rolling Beads
Rolling Beads

As I had mentioned my sister-in-law makes beaded jewelry and here are some photos of the “Trix” necklace my mom had fun making. 

Trix Necklace
Trix Necklace
Trix Necklace with Bling
Trix Necklace with Bling

 

Don’t forget to check out Alpaca Farm Girl’s Fiber Art Fridays