texastailfeathers said:
I agree that it stinks. I sell birds to a few pet shops and the owners tell me that animals are pure profit in most cases. They use fair market RETAIL cost of food, housing, and handling to their "care cost figures", but it is very rare that the average pet shop actually spends that kind of money to care for live animals. They actually pay the WHOLESALE cost of care, but then ding customers with the RETAIL cost. Actual cost of housing a single snake is ~$10 total, including viv and food (most house same-species snakes together and they don't buy a new viv for each new batch of animals) . The inflated RETAIL cost of housing and feeding a single snake (retail-priced viv, 4 weeks of retail-priced food, retail-priced substrate, retail-priced water dishes and accessories, and employee labor (at the manager rate, not the employee rate) add up to significantly more. The average mark-up on pet store goods is between 100-150%. The mark-up on live animals is AT LEAST that much. When I sell a $100 bird to a pet shop, they spend about $25-50 in total care and then turn around and sell the bird for $400. Effing ridiculous. And adult birds/mammals are NOT sellable for more than babies. Even proven breeders in prime breeding condition are sold for 10-25% less than the ever-in-demand babies.
Hmm...reading over the thread again, I'm pretty sure my response was pretty much :-offtopic
ANYWAY, back on topic...I guess it just depends on the animal. Snake breeders are very lucky that the market favors adults and that customers are willing to pay more for adults.
I'll shut up now. :bang:
If you think that's bad, you should never shop outside of outlets and bargain warehouses anymore.
The average retail markup for ANY shop is roughly 300%. If you can't mark your product UP 300% from your wholesale purchase price, you will barely cover your expenses.
First of all...when was the last time you saw an actual ADULT corn snake for sale in a pet store? In reality, MOST pet shops, at least the ones I have been to, will heavily discount a snake for sale after it has been there for a year. Why? Because babies are cuter, they cost less to keep, and a "pet owner" doesn't care at all about turning a profit on future breeding...They want a baby that they can raise.
Secondly...when purchasing sub-adults or adults from a reputable breeder, you can pretty much rest assured that this particular animal will come to you free of disease, parasites, feeding problems, or any other issues related to raising a baby.
Thirdly...if breeders started tallying their actual cost
per snake and adding it into the price of those babies, including time, electricity, losses, materials, hard goods, food, space and the myriad of other overhead expenses that are simply "part of the job", your little normal hatchling would cost you WELL over the $25 price tag you find on most breeder's websites.
You can say it stinks all you want, but the bottom line is, quite simply, it takes ALOT of time, material, labor, effort, and COST to support and supply those baby hatchlings, let alone a sub-adult or an adult. If actual cost was figured into the sale price of ANY snakes by ANY
reputable breeder, nobody would be paying less than $60 for even the most common of morphs.
It is, quite frankly, an expensive business to run. A business in which the MAJORITY of breeders are simply unable to breed full time. Why? Because there simply is not enough profit margin to do so. You have a few that are well-enough established that they no longer need a "day job". But you ask around...the majority of the breeders on this site alone have a day job, and have no plans of quitting anytime soon, simply because the profit margin with the retail value of corn snakes is simply not enough to live on AND support the business.
You might think it stinks to pay sop much for a snake. I think it stinks that people are so picky and greedy that they never consider the cost to the breeder when complaining about the price tag of a morph.
All of this and we haven't even STARTED to discuss the actual cost of losing clutches or breeder females. Other retail business recoup their losses through their sales, why does it "stink" for snake breeders to try and recoup a small semblence of their own cost? It doesn't "stink"...it is business...