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Living with Llamas:Tales from Juniper RidgeYou can buy Living
with Llamas from our one-page store.
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The place was an enchanted forest. "You'll recognize it by a llama statue out front,'' Ken Safley had told me on the phone. The large statue was set in an open field, and suggested that this was no ordinary ranch. Behind the field was woodland, and flitting about among the trees we could see the delicate shapes of dozens of llamas. The continuing rain made the place seem all the more magical: with no clues from the sun, we were suspended outside of time. Ken gave us a tour, beginning with the forest. Surrounded by beautiful female llamas was the bushy-eyebrowed stud, John L. Lewis. The herd was graceful, mostly medium-sized, with long wool. They were friendly, but stand-offish enough that you could walk easily among them. "I don't like a herd that crowds you,'' Ken said. It was fairyland with practical touches. The trees were wrapped with wire, to keep the llamas from eating the bark and killing the trees. There were two latches on the gate between pastures. "That way, if I should miss one, the other will hold,'' Ken pointed out, as we moved into the next field. Here were the little ones, six months and younger, with their mothers. The woods sloped down to a creek, very full this rainy day. A rounded footbridge led to more pasture. Ken showed us the mother and the grandmother of the little female he had for sale. Finally we came to her. She was in a large, open barn, with a group
of newly-weaned six-month-old babies. She was eleven months old,
and shorter than any of them, though more filled out. We walked
among the babies. They ran this way and that, continuous movement
swirling around us. The one we came to see was standing still, watching
us. And she was so very small. "She'll grow more,'' said Ken, "but both of her parents are on the small side. She's not going to be a big llama.'' [next ] |
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