I am only keeping this species because I love working with them. I have never recouped my mice, time and additions to my collection breeding anything, and have no illusions that these will be any different. I just love these animals!
Sure! I wasn't actually referring to you specifically, I was pretty much generalizing about the industry as a whole. It's like corns and ball pythons, the only reason a person should want to get into breeding those would be solely for the love of the species because there's way too much competition out there. As much as I enjoy keeping both of those species, from a business standpoint, I just couldn't understand a person investing heavily into these animals and expecting to break even for several years if ever.
But for small time breeders/keepers such as you and I, it's got to be for the love of the animals and nothing else because you simply cannot compete with the other breeders that have that long term advantage. While I am totally realistic about the value of our morphs being driven down significantly over the next few years, I hope that we can at least break even on some of the more expensive ones we invested in such as the axanthics and anaconda. Those 3 snakes alone cost us a small fortune!!! I can't even imagine the amounts of money many have lost in the ball python game. I have spoken with people who have spent $20k on a snake that 2 years later is worth maybe $1k, maybe. Fortunately, hognose are still a relatively unheard of snake and slowly starting to catch on in the industry.
DeadMouse said:
by the time you buy that pink pastel or axanthic or anaconda hognose, you'll be paying a significant amount less than people such as myself have paid.
elrojo said:
I hope you're right about that. It would be a fun one to get into the price range of the average hobby breeder.
Well, I've no doubt that it's still going to take several years before all the other morphs drop down to prices that the average hobbiest could still reasonably afford. Especially considering the fact that the Anacondas have opened up a whole new pandora's box of possibilities. While albinos have surely dropped in price now in the $300-500 range, morphs like the hypos and pink pastels have stayed reasonably stable price wise. While it wouldn't surprise me to see axanthics and anacondas hit the $2k range by next year, I think that they will still stay between $1k-$2k for quite a while. But with the economy the way it is right now, some breeders might get desperate enough to lower their prices to insane levels and end up undercutting everybody else just to make a quick buck. I just hope it doesn't come to this as it really only hurts those of us that have invested a lot of time and money to work with these animals but I guess time will tell how it all plays out.
I'm referring to animals on Internet classifieds and that I've seen at shows. "Red" is the worst for this. I've seen 'em almost gray enough to be axanthic and called red. One "red" at Columbia made me wonder if I was color blind!
I totally agree. I've seen a lot of people claim an animal is such and such a color and when you really look it, you are left wondering wtf they are talking about. While I'm a lot more skeptical of the dubious nature of online ads, it's really something when you go to a show and see something labeled as one thing that it doesn't appear to be. When I said that it's really dependent on how you want to define what a "normal" even is, is because there's still a high level of variance between normal colors. I have several "normals" that vary between kind of a tannish color to your typical more brownish to even a type of forest green (to me anyways as I'm sure my wife will correct me as being wrong

). There's only one female I have that I referred to as a blond phase because not only was her body a light yellow color, but her spotting was almost hypo-ish in appearance as well. As she's aging, she's darkening up a little but still quite different from my other group of adults. But again, if I were to sell an animal such as that, I would probably still only to label it as a normal unless it was a gene that proved out to exhibit the same traits.
To me, that's a huge problem in a lot of these morphs regardless of species. Too many layman are trying to discern the exact genetics of an animal without any real study or even proving if the gene is heritable. Like KJUN and I conversed about earlier, one example is the so-called Toffeebelly/T+ Albino hognose. I see a few individuals trying to hype these up and yet even readily admit that they have not proven out the genetics yet. It's one thing to announce that you have a possible new morph and then coincide that with a few years of proving them out and studying the animals. But it's something entirely different when you get these animals, hype them up on forums (without knowing anything about them) and then try selling them for several thousands of dollars. I highly commend Brent Bumgardner for not only taking the time to prove out his anacondas but for the manner in which he informed the community without really trying to hype them up solely based on the money factor, at least that's how I saw it played out. Sure, he's made a ton of money selling anacondas this year, but he earned it and that's what it's all about when you have a spectacular animal that is proven out.
I wish I could afford visual animals of all the foundation morphs. I'm just not used to colubrids costing thousands of dollars!
Well, there definitely are several colubrid species other than corns that can and do cost thousands, the thing is they are often overlooked due to the popularity of corns and ball pythons. One example is Bob Applegates Striped Albino Sinaloan. He's just recently produced these and they are going for $3k a pair. And really, that's not his most expensive snake either. When we visited him this summer, we bought a pair of his hypo Greeri for more than his striped sinaloans. Do I think there's a market for $2k hypo Greeri? Not at all! But I love Greeri, they are really one of my favorite kingsnakes and we bought them just based on that alone, and also because I think they are totally beautiful in hypo form
I hope their popularity rises, they are a fantastic snake.
I agree and I do think they will get more popular as more breeders start getting into them and all the wild morphs start popping out. I used to be solely a corn/king guy until we bought a pair of western hognose. Those snakes turned our whole snake keeping world upside down, literally. I honestly don't think we would have gotten into the breeding game so deep had it not been for our love and admiration of these wonderful snakes. They are truly unique in the colubrid world!
I was happy with a small group of normals until I saw this photo Clay Davenport took in Daytona:
Now I pretty much want them all! :laugh:
Yeah, that was Chad Fuchs and Jeff Nemanius' table that that picture was taken from. The two of them together have quite a collection of hognose. Honestly, I was more impressed with their booth because of their hognose display than I was with Brian Barczyk's despite Brian having a most impressive collection himself. He just doesn't display or push them like he does his pythons which is a real shame since he produced the first snow hogs last year and yet has rarely showed them off :shrugs:
Like I said before, it's an exciting time for hognose and the next few years will show some very wonderful animals being produced
Hypo Female (2008)