Suri
Suri llama describes a fleece type in which long, lustrous fibers hang in separate locks rather than forming a fluffy woolly blanket. The term is familiar from suri alpacas, but suri llamas are llamas, Lama glama, and may be recorded differently depending on registry or breeder community. Good examples show draping pencil or wave locks over the body, sometimes with coverage on the neck and legs, while still retaining the larger llama frame and banana-shaped ears. Suri coats occur in many colors and patterns, including solids, pintos, appaloosas, roans, and blue-eyed whites.
Keeping a suri llama centers on protecting the locks without letting the coat become a mat of debris and moisture. Pastures with heavy burrs, mud, or tight brush can damage fiber quickly, and warm climates call for timely shearing because air does not move well through a full fleece. Breeding programs usually select for lock structure, luster, density, and sound conformation, not just length. Buyers should handle the animal, part the fleece to check skin and condition, and ask whether the line has produced manageable fiber as adults, since cria coats can change.
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