PHOENIX -- Two quick-footed llamas that dashed in and out of traffic in a Phoenix-area retirement community were captured by authorities Thursday, causing a stir in the streets and on social media.

A large, white llama and a smaller, black llama darted through the streets of Sun City during the lunch hour. Cars and golf carts stopped in their tracks because of the wayward livestock.

The fugitive llamas were part of a trio that were making a therapy visit to residents Thursday at a senior assisted living facility.

Their televised breakout from GenCare SunCity at The Carillons quickly inspired a Twitter account and several hashtags including .LlamasonTheLoose, .llamadrama and .TEAMLLAMAS.

Arizona U.S. Sen. John McCain and the Arizona Cardinals got in on the fun. McCain tweeted that he was "glad that .LlamaDrama 2015 has been peacefully resolved!" The Cardinals tweeted that team "agreed to one-year deals with the .llamasontheloose," promising the animals a salary in hay.

Even the North American Aerospace Defence Command tweeted: "Llama had no known connections to ISIS. Appears to have self-radicalized."

The llama saga also made actor Lorenzo Lamas a trending topic. Some on Twitter joked that they heard the actor was on the loose in Arizona.

The senior centre's executive director, Jill Parsons, said it was the first time the facility had hosted the llamas.

For more than an hour, residents petted them and walked them up and down the halls, Parsons said. Sometime after 11 a.m., the animals' handlers took them outside for a bathroom break. That's when one got startled and took off, with the second llama in pursuit.

Parsons said staff and some residents went outside to try and help corral them. Even the facility's chef tried to help by waving some lettuce.

"He Googled 'What do llamas like to eat' and it brought up romaine lettuce," Parsons said.

Because there weren't enough people to encircle the llamas, the handlers instructed everyone to slowly walk toward them with their arms out.

"So many times we thought we were going to get them there and they would dart in another direction," Parsons said.

The llamas got around the corner of the building and broke into a run down the street.

The animals galloped along the sidewalk, through manicured yards and along street medians. The llamas thwarted numerous attempts by Maricopa County sheriff's deputies and bystanders to round them up before they were roped into custody.

The black llama was captured first. The white one was nabbed after two men in the back of a moving pickup repeatedly threw out a lasso. It took three men to secure the rope.

The entire ordeal lasted about an hour.

Parsons declined to name the llamas' owners, saying that they were somewhat embarrassed by the whole ordeal. But Parsons said her facility "would welcome them back in a heartbeat."