• Home
  • Animals Farms Products
  • Pricing
  • Websites
  • List your animals
    • Sign In
    • Sign up - Get started
    • Help & Support
    • Herd Management Website Hosting About Openherd

Search Animals for Sale

  • Alpacas (8311)
  • Goats (395)
  • Swine (10)
  • Yak (85)
  • Sheep (95)
  • Dogs (28)
  • Llamas (40)
  • Chickens (18)
  • Cattle (15)
  • Miniature Cattle (3)
  • Rabbits (23)
  • Horses (32)
  • Miniature Horses (15)
  • Ducks (5)
  • Donkeys (16)
  • Birds (3)
  • Geese (2)
  • Quail (1)

— The Openherd Team

Browser not Supported

Please update your browser to a current version of

  • Google Chrome
  • Mozilla Firefox
  • Microsoft Edge
  • Opera
Tierra Prometida Alpaca Ranch - Logo

Tierra Prometida Alpaca Ranch

....a promise for the future

Share
  • Email a Link
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on X
  • Pin on Pinterest
Save
 Photos
The Deschner Family Alydar Tierra Prometida Alydar's Fleece 2023 Snowmass Elite Legend--Bringing Legends to TEXAS Alydar Judges' Choice Futurity 2021 Alydar Nationals 2023
Rhonda and Kern Deschner
4805 FM 32
Fischer, TX, 78623
512-753-9962
www.alpacausa.com
Facebook
💬

Member of

Alpaca Breeders of the RockiesTxOLANAlpacas of Oklahoma
  • About
  • Animals
  • Products
  • Photos
  • Blog
  • Articles
  • More
    • Benefits of AOA and Affiliate Membership
    • The Alpaca Breed Standard
    • EPD's and Stuff
    • Alpaca FAQs
    • The Alpaca Industry
    • The A, B, C's of theStrategies For Success in the Alpaca Business
    • About Our Ranch
Book a farm event >
FarmBlogWhy....Winter Births in Texas?
Share
  • Email a Link
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on X
  • Pin on Pinterest
Save
Tierra Prometida Alpaca Ranch - Logo
Alpacas53
  • Breeding Chart
  • Foundation
    • Huacaya11
  • Breeding Stock
    • Huacaya Females31
    • Huacaya Males17
  • Herdsires
    • Huacaya12
  • For Sale
    • Huacaya Bred Female9
    • Huacaya Open Female12
    • Huacaya Male14
    • Huacaya Fiber/Companion2
  • Sold304
Products7
  • Clothing & Apparel1
    • Hats1
      • Knitted Hats1
  • Home & Garden5
    • Rugs & Carpets5
      • Rugs5
  • Fiber & Yarn1
    • Yarn1
      • Worsted. #41


Proud Member of

Alpaca Breeders of the RockiesTxOLANAlpacas of Oklahoma

Featured Items

Photo of Red Granites Alydar by Val D Lsere
Red Granites Alydar by Val D Lsere
Dark Rose Grey
The WHOLE Package
Stud Fee: $5000
Photo of FT Wild Thing
FT Wild Thing
True Black
Stratton Daughter
$10000
Photo of TP Relentless Passion
TP Relentless Passion
White
$3000
Photo of TP Elixane by Alydar
TP Elixane by Alydar
Medium Rose Grey
Beautiful Roan Alydar daughter
$13500

Monday, January 14, 2013

Why....Winter Births in Texas?

Winter is a good time to be an alpaca. Finally some relief from the heat, and the alpacas could not be happier! They are in full fleece with only a month before show season, and only four months before shearing time. They are energized by the cold. While the moms watch, the excited babies run laps around the pastures, kind of their version of alpaca NASCAR. On a day so icy that the humans just huddle inside, the alpacas are practically bouncing in the pasture. They are made for this season. Their advantage over the cold is, of course, their wonderful fleece which they will be happy to share with us come springtime. Fortunately we have last year’s fleece that we can use now. In Texas, winter is the time for babies! Anywhere that winters get cruelly cold, like the alpaca’s native Altiplano in South America, babies (“cria”) are born in the summer. Here, our summers are too hot for an alpaca mom, a “dam”, to be at term with a pregnancy, but winter here is perfect. Alpaca ranchers need to be observant because a wet newborn cria can get dangerously hypothermic if not assisted, dried, and warmed up, but alpacas have evolved the tendency to have cria between dawn and noon to take advantage of the sun. This makes life a lot easier for us. If night is falling and it looks like a dam is going to have a cria, we can put her in the barn and we may find a warm, dry baby in the morning. Cria usually weigh from 14 to 20 pounds at birth and may gain up to a pound a day for the first month, all from nursing. It is important for the alpaca rancher to watch the newborn cria a make sure they are “figuring out” how to nurse and are “latching on”. Once they do so, they will generally be just fine. Alpaca dams are very attentive moms, but the cria have the protection of the whole herd and all the other moms. Some dams will even allow cria to nurse that are not their own. Some cria get pretty chubby this way but they usually burn it off at the races. Cria are a lot of fun, naturally trusting and curious, and the dams trust their human friends around the cria. Winter is a good time to be an alpaca rancher, too.
© 2026 Openherd Terms Privacy
More info
List your animals

Openherd

We exist to help family farms be successful.

  • About Openherd
  • Herd Management
  • Marketplace
  • Websites
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Facebook page

Support

100% U.S.-based email and phone support!

  • Support & FAQ
  • Join Openherd
  • Plans & Pricing

Advertise

Advertising for farms, vendors, professionals, and corporate.

  • Advertise on Openherd
  • Advertising types, costs
  • Create an ad (account required)

How Openherd Works

Our system is easy, affordable, and effective:

  • Livestock Marketplace
  • Herd management
  • Farm website hosting
  • All managed in one place!
  • Learn more List your animals!

Website Hosting

The easiest farm website you'll ever have!

  • Websites
  • Website Designs
  • Domains, SSLs, Email
  • Ecommerce
  • Concierge Services
  • How to create your website
  • Why Openherd websites are best for farms