LilacGal":1b9cvq5b said:
Correct me if I'm wrong but harvesting from an Angora is sort of like shearing a sheep? Doesn't hurt the animal, if anything it makes them more comfortable right?
Traditionally,
all Angoras were "plucked" (harvested) when they began to molt, as MSD (MamaSheepdog) explained. They just had this dead hair sitting on their little bodies, making them hot and threatening them with wool block--intestinal obstruction--from trying to groom it out themselves.
So plucking was a multi-faceted benefit: rabbit health was preserved, people got to spin Angora yarn, and then people got to wear Angora-containing clothing! (seven times warmer than sheep wool, according to studies, and almost indecently soft)
Many Angoras still are plucked. However, in the late '80s an American English Angora breeder observed that one of her does had a coat that
never molted. The breeder, an astute woman, immediately thought that this could be the answer to wool block for English Angoras, because this particular doe
required scissor-harvesting ("shearing"). After a few generations--and fast-forwarding to today--many English Angoras in the United States are from her lines, so when adopting/purchasing/acquiring an English Angora in the U.S. (and maybe Canada? I simply don't know), it's advisable to ask whether the rabbit needs to be sheared or if it can be plucked. You want to take good care of an Angora, even more so than other breeds (higher % protein in the diet, heavy grooming requirement, etc.).
Plucked Angora rabbits have personal molting cycles. I've read about Angoras having anywhere from 90-day to five-month cycles, so the key is watching the coat closely. If you've ever groomed long-haired dogs or cats, it's like having packed coat: the hair *wants* to come out (on the plucked bunnies), but just needs help. I've had to use rubber gloves to pluck the forelegs of a Golden Retriever, but Angora fiber is less rigorous to remove--assuming you have a cooperative rabbit.
The scissored bunnies require a whole different set of skills.<br /><br />__________ Wed Dec 18, 2013 8:04 pm __________<br /><br />
MamaSheepdog":1b9cvq5b said:
DogCatMom":1b9cvq5b said:
They were all "Oh, great! you want to rescue an Angora!" back in July/August, but whenever I mentioned that I wanted to actually harvest the Angora's wool and spin it, horror ensued. :?
Seriously? :shock: I think I have heard it all now.
It was incredible. Before I was even able to broach the subject at the first rescue, the volunteer said something like, "I'm so glad you're interested in just brushing the Angoras! Most people want to
USE them for spinning." The tone of disgust in her voice told me more than I had ever wanted to know about the disconnect between some rabbit rescue folk and reality. But since that particular Angora was bonded to a huge second rabbit and DH was very leery of even one, Miss Angora didn't come home with me. She turned out to be 1) the only true Angora who was 2) really available for adoption at any of the Bay Area rabbit rescues from late July through early to mid-September.
So, for a number of weird reasons, I ended up with my American Chinchilla neutered male gardening assistant....