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The World's Finest Alpaca Breeder; Don Julio Barreda by Mike Safley Don Julio Barreda's mother, Dona Victona Aragon Barreda, bred alpacas prior to bringing Julio into the world. Julio felt the pulse of the alpaca as a young boy. He Iearned the art of breeding camelids and harvesting their fiber beginning at 13 years of age. Today,
Don Julio is one of the most important Peruvian alpaca ranchers. His ranch
"Accoyo," an Indian word meaning "sandy ground," lies near
the
Beginning
in the 1970’s, Alpaca breeding suffered in From
the start, Don Julio has been known as an innovator. He was the first breeder to
introduce fencing. Many in The benefit of fencing did not stop with better nutrition. This innovation allowed for the separate breeding of suri and huacaya. Llamas could not be crossbred with alpacas. Don Julio began to develop truly purebred alpacas of the highest quality. Today, after many years of rigorous genetic selection, Barreda has redefined the alpaca. His ranch maintains two herds of huacaya. One herd produces a fine, but less dense fleece of 20 microns or less. The other herd produces a very dense fleece of up to 24 microns. Most of these alpaca produce over 10 pounds of fleece annually. At 84
years of age, Don Julio’s time is split between Macusani and Even
with all these accomplishments, he and his lovely wife, Antonieta de Barreda,
have found time to rear four daughters and many grandchildren. What
has been accomplished at Don Julio's beloved "Accoyo" is known to
every alpaca breeder in "After more than five decades of breeding, I can identify some modest achievements. The Accoyo herd is uniform in all respects. I have been able to breed well-defined Alpaca phenotypes with an absence of atypical animals. There are no huarizos, suri huacayas or huayaca suris in my herd. “The
Accoyo production charts document a doubling of annual fleece yield per animal
since 1946. During the same period, the herd's average body weight per animal
has increased 25%. I have also created a second line of huayaca bloodstock which
I call "select." This herd is being selected for fineness. I have
great expectations for this project, “I attribute Accoyo's success at breeding alpacas with superior production qualities to the father's lineage. My machos were all bred and selected at Accoyo, and my herd has not suffered from the influence of sires with unknown fathers. I can truly say that the sires of Accoyo have been more than enough and I am proud of the results." THE ROAD TO MACUSANI There is only one way to travel to Macusani - over land, over mountains, and through rain-choked rivers. The roads are narrow, rough, and often non-existent. The ten-hour journey reminds one of the famous rock song, “Shake, Rattle and Roll.” As you break over the mountain pass and Don Julio Barreda, Estancia Accoyo, descend
down the winding path to Macusani, you realize there is nothing soft about MACUSANI, CENTER OF THE ALPACA UNIVERSE The green hills and mountains that surround Macusani are punctuated by herds of white and fawn alpacas tended by Indian women dressed in skirts of brilliant blue, yellow and red. The town itself is arranged around a central square, which is dominated by a huge, barrel-roofed church. The town has recently acquired street lights and a new red brick school built by Alberto Fuji Mori, the popular past Peruvian president. Macusani
is known for producing the "Fiber of the Gods" or the "alpaca
fleece grown close to heaven." Every year, representatives of Grupo Inca
and Mitchell Bros. find their way to Macusani, which sits at the foot of Allin
Capac ("the mighty one"), to purchase bales of alpaca, which fuel the
textile mills of
Life is not easy at 15,000 feet. The air is thin, the pasture sparse. In the Peruvian Altiplano, the people eat sopa (soup) for breakfast, lunch and dinner. For variety, they have meat and potatoes in their sopa and then change at the next meal to potatoes and meat. The next day they might eat just meat and the day after that potatoes. Life here is basic and one has to wonder why the alpaca with its luxurious fleece, multiple colors, and soft manner, has chosen to call the harsh Peruvian mountains home. Julie Safley with the head cooks of Accoyo. ACCOYO, A NATURAL FIBER FACTORY Alpacas are ultimately judged on their ability to
produce high quality fiber. At Accoyo, ranch records document a doubling
of fleece production, on a per animal basis, since 1946. The dramatic nature of
these results was demonstrated when 462 huacayas were shorn prior to entering
quarantine for the 1995 Five Star Alpaca Import
At Accoyo, each alpaca is first bred for size. Next, the alpaca are selected for their fleece density. Bigger animals with more fleece per square inch produce more fleece per shearing. People are amazed to see alpaca after alpaca yielding a minimum of 10 pounds of fleece from the annual shearing. Several males' fleeces from the Plantel herd weighed over 14 pounds. Samples
of fleece from the males in the Accoyo Plantel herd were analyzed by
Yocom-McColl Testing Laboratories in Don Julio displays a fine fleece at Accoyo Ranch. THE ART AND SCIENCE OF HERDSIRE SELECTION Don
Julio Barreda takes great pride in the machos of Accoyo. He has been Fleece weight is not the only measure of quality. Each macho must have a refined elegance, Accoyo’s trademark head, large stature, and fine, uniform fleece. "Seventy percent of the entire Accoyo fleece clip grades baby," says Peter Kothe, the man in charge of buying fleece for Mitchell Bros., one of the world's largest purchasers of alpaca fleece. Kothe also says the "entire clip" includes leg, belly, and neck fiber from the total herd, young and old, not just the "Royal Family" or "Plantel" Alpacas - amazing testimony to the quality of the Accoyo production. Don Julio weighs a fleece at Accoyo. PEDIGREES: A HISTORY OF SUCCESS The father's lineage is at the heart of the Accoyo breeding philosophy. "I've kept pedigrees for all my machos" says Don Julio. "Each pedigree indicates both the fleece weight and micron count of the fleece harvested during the alpacas first two shearings." The Accoyo pedigrees have a lock of fleece attached, from each shearing, together with all the other pertinent information.
Pedigrees from Accoyo machos. THE "COWBOYS" OF ACCOYO Most
of the men and women who work at Accoyo The crew at Accoyo eating "Paca-Paws" candy from the Northwest Alpacas Country Store
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