I want to know..
When do you consider a problem feeder, a problem feeder? Is there a set point that you label them and either discontinue that line, or give up?
Right now I've got a clutch of 13 motley-stripes. So far 6 have accepted a f/t pink as their first meal 9 days after hatching, the other 7 completely ignored the food. Do I consider them problem feeders if they ignore their first meal?
It seems people have varying degrees of patience when it comes to assisting a hatchling to live. Some will spend all of their time encouraging and trying every trick in the book to get one to thrive, others seeing the logic in Nature's way, speeds up the end result of Nature and puts that animal down. I say, if I were a snake, I'd rather start out in someone's house who's willing to take the time.
I'm not saying either way is correct, or wrong. I agree with the assumption that these are our creations, they live in our house and we feed them. Not to sound high and mighty, but we play God in our house everyday with our pets.
I agree with both camps on this, thus by these being in our care in captivity that we should give them every chance we can, obviously Nature wouldn't be so forgiving. And I also agree to the point that sometimes it's best to let a stubborn feeder pass on.
I do a similiar thing everyday on deciding who stays and who "leaves" in my rodent colony. I don't want to perpetuate a bad breeding line, or a line in which the females eat their young, and I certainly don't abide a vicious rodent who won't hesitate to bite me.
I also agree that if we just let the stubborn ones get whats coming to them in Nature, we probably wouldn't have morphs such as bloodreds, butters, miamis, etc. I myself own one of Rich's "problem feeders". I asked him specially for one, because A) I can't afford a "good" one of that morph most of the time and B) I know it'd help those great feeders get started and out the door by taking his time away from the problem ones. In all honesty, the problem feeder gave me one instance of a problem when I first got him: he wanted his mice to smell like anoles. I obliged him on this once, and then went to a rodent scented pink the next meal, and he took it. Sometimes I think it all has to do with a change of scenery, and possibly a bumpy ride. Although I can't imagine what role a bumpy ride would be in Nature.
So anyway, I'm not saying any one idea on the issue is wrong or right, we each do our own things differently.
As for the selling of non-feeding or problem feeding animals...I don't mind as long as the consumer knows what they're getting into. If they don't mind that the animal has a history of being stubborn, then ok, let em have it. But it's the knowingly selling a non-feeder as a "great feeder" is what I have a problem with. It's like my other hobby of Indian artifacts. There are some people who are completely motivated by the dollars and won't hesitate to sell you authentic or fake, so long as they get their money. So you always have to be on the look out that that rock, may not be real. And on the same hand, that snake may not be all of what it is. Thankfully, I've never dealt with anyone like that. Most of the snakes I've bought the breeders told me straight up front what faults the animals had, and I accepted that. You can't conduct people's business for them, but it's up to those of us who are honest in our dealings to set the pace for the reptile industry. There are always going to be a few bad apples in every barrel, there's no getting around that.
As for me, since this is my first clutch and babies ever..I'm going to give them every chance to make it. When I get up to the point of having hundreds of hatchlings to contend with, maybe I can afford to be a little less caring. =)