The shearer was a really awesome lady who did an impressive job:
She sheared in such a way that Kai's fiber came off in two large sheets:
And, at the end of the day, that huge "rug" that Kai had been carrying around for two years, fit into an empty feed bag:
I played around with this fiber for days afterwards. It was so soft. This whole shearing process was completely new and totally fascinating to me:


The majority of it, though, went to my blog friend, Clairz, over at The Zees Go West. She is a spinner extraordinaire and wanted to spin some of Kai's fiber "rug" into yarn. She even promised to send me a bit of it, but I was just so tickled she wanted some of Kai's fiber, I didn't really expect anything in return. So, imagine my surprise when I received a box in the mail last week and found all of this beautiful Kai yarn inside (the smaller baggie also included some beautiful sheep's wool yarn and alpaca yarn for comparison):
Skein after beautiful skein of Kai yarn is now in my possession:
Hard to believe now that this was once the matted coat my llama wore:
You can read all about how Clairz turned that messy, debris-filled coat that Kai wore into this lovely yarn by clicking here: "Spinning Kai"



My mom put my youngest son, Aidan, immediately to work:
And she couldn't wait to get those knitting needles working:
If there's enough yarn, Aidan and I will both get hats:
I think Kai would like this, don't you?