HanneysCorn
Canadian Cornaholic
Basically only someone who is into corns or plans on breeding them even knows what some of this stuff is.
Jen, I agree with you 100%.
In our country, with the population of the whole nation being that of the state of California, the average person knows corns as being normals, amels, anerys, snows and hypos in their various pattern combinations. Only those who are die-hard corn enthusiasts, mainly breeders, are even aware that other morphs exist.
I've found over the last few years that $200.00 is about the maximum limit for pricing on any morph even if it's the first time it's being offered in Canada. Folks will pay thousands for a ball python morph or a new strain of boa, but corns are 'sissy' snakes to many up here. To some, they present no challenge for husbandry or breeding, and that makes them beginner snakes no matter what colour or pattern they come in. I will say however that many who are breeders of other species are amazed with us corny folk and our genetic advancements, our constant search for new genes to isolate, new phenotypes. But value wise...hey, they are just cornsnakes.
So while that really nice and rare corn snake that there are only a few of out there seems like it SHOULD be worth a grand, realistically there isn't a whole lot of people that interested in corns and want THAT morph (considering the combos and possibilities are just about endless and tastes vary..).
In truth...no cornsnake is worth $1K. It's only worth what the buyer will pay. History has shown to those that follow the new genetic morphs that if you have patience and can wait a year or two, the value will plummet substantially...and may well do so in the first year of production if the breeder can't sell the excess he is willing to part with.
I agree with many here that once you 'sale' an item, even a cornsnake, that now represents to buyers it really is worth less. You've now presented a baseline for pricing for the next year; you've now shown to the next breeder of that morph where to start his pricing for the upcoming season; you've now shown to the buyer that what you thought it was worth...it wasn't.
There are two enemies we currently fight in the corn breeders world of today. One is the economy and the other is overproduction. When there is no demand, supply must be reduced. When there is no money for the luxury of spending even a $100.00 out of a budget which barely covers today's expenses of 'living', how can one expect to not see prices take a nose dive.
Cutting back on production is the first step to stabilizing a market. Until such time as the demand exceeds the supply, the value of what you produce will only continue to go down. The new morphs may be beautiful, rare, and highly wanted in a corn enthusiast's mind, but the reality is, in my country anyways, if you really want to sell what you produce, you have to price them according to what they are worth in the eyes of the buyer, not the breeder. We've shown them time and time again that if they are patient even for 6 months they can purchase that morph for 1/2 or less at the end of the breeding season.
Ruth