Lanuda (Woolly)
Lanuda, meaning woolly in Spanish, describes the heavy-fleeced llama type with abundant fiber over the body and often along the neck, belly, and upper legs. In North American llama use it is usually a coat and type category, not a separate species or universally closed breed. Compared with a classic ccara, a lanuda llama tends to look rounder and softer because the fleece fills the outline. The fiber may be fine or mixed with guard hair, and coat colors range from plain black, brown, beige, and white to pinto, appaloosa, and roan patterns.
The same fleece that attracts spinners and show exhibitors also sets the management schedule. Woolly llamas may need regular grooming, timely shearing, and careful removal of burrs before mats tighten near the shoulders, tail, and belly. Heat stress is a real concern in warm regions, so shade, ventilation, and a sensible shearing date matter. Buyers should part the coat to inspect skin and body condition, because a full fleece can hide thinness, lice, rain rot, or old scars. Sound conformation and a steady temperament remain just as important as fiber coverage.
Colors: Appaloosa, Bay, Bay Black, Beige, Black, Black and White, Black-Brown, Blue Eyed White, Blue Roan, Brown, Brown and White, Calico, Charcoal, Classic Grey, Cream, Dark Brown, Dark Fawn, Dark Rose Grey, Dark Silver Grey, Fancy, Fawn, Fawn and White, Gray, Gray and White, Honey, Indefinite Dark, Indefinite Light, Light Brown, Light Fawn, Light Rose Grey, Light Silver Grey, Mahogany, Medium Brown, Medium Fawn, Medium Rose Grey, Medium Silver Grey, Modern Grey, Multi, Natural, Off-White, Paint, Pattern, Patterned, Piebald, Pinto, Red, Reddish-Brown, Red Roan, Reverse Appaloosa, Roan, Silver, Solid, Spotted, Tan, Tricolor, True Black, Tuxedo, White, Wild