DanielJones
I'll Lock Up
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Hello!
I was reading the thread from HATCO and noticed a question about Nutria. I may be totally wrong on this but here it goes.
I was watching one of those Bizzare Food shows with Andrew Zimmer and they were down in Louisiana, in the swamps hunting a rodent called a nutria. This rodent is very similar to a beaver & an otter. They are non-native to the area (native to South America) and are hunted because they are considered a pest and do considerable damage to the wetlands down there. They were orifinally introduced to Lousiana for farming purposes but of course some got away and bred like the proverbial rat.
Well I had also found out that the fur was used in the hatting industry because it is a water rodent like a beaver and it's fur shares the same qualities. So, the nutria blend is most likely a 50/50 of beaver & nutria fur to make the felt. Since there has been a decline in the demand for nutria fur their population increase is going to damage the Louisiana coastal wetlands to a point of becoming open water. So, would HATCO consider doing a nutria blend again to raise the quality of their fur felts? This would be a win/win situation. The quality of dress hats (fedora & western) would go up and there would be less damage to the ecosystem & a new economy could boom in Louisiana. Something to ponder on.
Check this site out for a little more info.
http://www.nutria.com/site.php
Cheers!
Dan
I was reading the thread from HATCO and noticed a question about Nutria. I may be totally wrong on this but here it goes.
I was watching one of those Bizzare Food shows with Andrew Zimmer and they were down in Louisiana, in the swamps hunting a rodent called a nutria. This rodent is very similar to a beaver & an otter. They are non-native to the area (native to South America) and are hunted because they are considered a pest and do considerable damage to the wetlands down there. They were orifinally introduced to Lousiana for farming purposes but of course some got away and bred like the proverbial rat.
Well I had also found out that the fur was used in the hatting industry because it is a water rodent like a beaver and it's fur shares the same qualities. So, the nutria blend is most likely a 50/50 of beaver & nutria fur to make the felt. Since there has been a decline in the demand for nutria fur their population increase is going to damage the Louisiana coastal wetlands to a point of becoming open water. So, would HATCO consider doing a nutria blend again to raise the quality of their fur felts? This would be a win/win situation. The quality of dress hats (fedora & western) would go up and there would be less damage to the ecosystem & a new economy could boom in Louisiana. Something to ponder on.
Check this site out for a little more info.
http://www.nutria.com/site.php
Cheers!
Dan