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Old 11-19-04, 05:44 AM   #16
Brent Strande
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I was talking about profit, not sole occupation. And I do know about the other expenses, but, for example, if you have an incubator that costs $200, and it hatches out 20 clutches over it's lifetime, it didn't cost $200 each, but $10 instead per clutch.

And I don't think that the electricity is all that much either... especially if you don't heat with lights. My electric bills are $23 a month and so are my neighbors. I keep 12 snakes, he doesn't. The electric cost is pretty minimal.

You are very right though, it most likely won't make you a millionaire. I doubt that I could ever be filthy rich, and that's not why I do it. But I do have the idea in the back of my mind of working at this, and eventually being able to quit my day job, in order to have time to care for all my animals, and that they can repay me by bringing in enough to compensate for quitting the job.
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Old 11-19-04, 06:19 AM   #17
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Ah, my mistake then.

points are still valid though. Though geography and choice of species makes a big difference too. I would imagine it's in general easier to do in most of the US than in Canada simply because of population density. More people into it in a much smaller geographical area.
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Old 11-19-04, 07:03 AM   #18
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EXACTLY what Brent said. The people that aren't making money at this are the people who keep buying animals, flipping them, buying more animals, eventually selling them as well, etc etc etc, but NEVER breeding a damn thing. They will never make any money. You will make 100x more money by just getting a baby pair of ANYTHING, raising them up, breeding them and selling the babies, than by buying a whole wackload of adult animals that you continually re-sell and never breed. Think about it. Even if you buy 2 pairs of baby Hog Island Boas for $1,000, keep them for 3 years and breed them, getting 20 babies from each pair, 40 babies total. Even if you WHOLESALED those babies out for $150 each, that's $6,000. You cannot tell me that it cost you $4,500 to keep 4 silly boas for 3 years. No way.

Do that and repeat for 5 different species and all of a sudden, you've made $30K. Holy smokes eh? Now imagine if you dealt with snakes that are above the $200-300 price range? All of a sudden, making $100K is not so tough now is it?

You'll never make a dime until you get the animals to stay healthy and reproduce CONSITENTLY. Once you do, you have a hobby that can subsidize other aspects of your life. How cool is that?
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Old 11-19-04, 08:07 AM   #19
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Breeding for profit would be an amazing way to make a living...I think it's possible, just not for me.

Although, an hour ago I had two crested geckos hatch, all goopy and googly eyed, and it reminded me WHY I'm in the hobby in the first place...

(Is it weird that I woke up at an odd hour this morning and felt an overwhelming compulsion to check the incubator?)
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Old 11-19-04, 09:20 AM   #20
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Too cool Heather. I gots no incubator fun for at least 4-6 more months, so I envy you! Incubator envy. LOL!!
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Old 11-19-04, 10:34 AM   #21
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I really don't think breeding and making a profit is very hard.

I hatched out 18 BP's (Pastels, poss het for Albino's and normals) this year and the money made from selling the normals paid for my rats for the year and probably the extra electricity. So the Pastels and the poss het for Albino income was all gravy....well it would have been if I didn't buy anything else but who can do that...lol.

I also had a little Leo project for a year and I decided after I sold the adults I would just see what kind of profit I made. I used pretty rough numbers but I came up with a profit of ~$2,000 in a year from a purchase of a trio and that was including taking a loss on the original trio. Not bad but I hate keeping bugs so the Leo's had to go.

So breeding for profit is definitely not out of the question just work with something you like so it doesn't feel like another job.

Good luck.
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Old 11-19-04, 11:35 AM   #22
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Making a profit doesn't seem hard...making a living looks pretty damned hard, and there really isn't room for a lot of hobbyists to do it. It's obvious there's a lot of hard work going into it by the full-timers, and not just behind the scenes. Building and maintiaining a business and a reputation seems like at least as much work as building and maintaining a breeding stock.

I'll be breeding at some point. I just want to offset some or all of my costs since I'm keeping snakes anyway. No reason not have some of them in pairs.
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Old 11-19-04, 12:34 PM   #23
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I know a case of this as well.

One of my friend's moronic buddies decides to create a "business" called "High End Reptiles". He has only four reptiles to begin with, two frilled dragons, and two veiled chameleons.

The frilled dragons have a fungus on their fans, and the veiled chameleons are in worse condition. He keeps the male on a potted plant, no lighting, not heating, and 6 feet in the air. The male has major deformaties on his back, and crest. The female did not get any UV as a baby, and has major deformities as well as a stump of a tail. I have told him repeatedly if he tries to breed them, the female could die.

He comes into the store I work at and asks me how to fix the fungus on the Frilleds. I said, I don't know, well, because I don't. He asks my boss, he doesn't know either. I told him to check up on it on the internet, or to go to a vet. He shrugs it off and says "Nah, its something common so I'm not worrying about it".

All I think is, what an a$$.

He then asks me how easy it is to sell tarantulas if you have a market. I said that it isn't that bad. He starts asking me questions about breeding them. Let me remind you he has no interest in spiders whatsoever. I told him that he knows nothing about tarantulas, and therefore breeding should be the last of his concerns.

He also does not know how to feed the animals properly. He doesn't give them crickets and they are fed various types of worms once or twice a week. He told me he wants to calcium coat a fuzzy mouse (for his snake). I told him that there is calcium in the bones and he does not need to do that. He refuses to acknowledge what I say.

I was furious after all of this. He obviously can care less about the animals and he only uses them to breed. Next time I see him he can expect me to rant on him.

He does not take care of the breeding specimens he already has, so who will believe him that the babies are in good condition? As of now I am ruining his reputation, and I am happy to do so as hopefully it will stop the hurting of these animals.

I told him that people will be able to find higher quality animals from a reputable breeder for a cheaper cost, he says "We'll see, I know how to bull people." Obviously not; I didn't fall for it and I will make sure no one else does.

Aidan
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Old 11-19-04, 12:44 PM   #24
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SaIiLdVaEnR, I give your friend six months before everything he has dies and he is back playing nintendo full time!
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Old 11-30-04, 12:32 PM   #25
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I breed Bearded Dragons. Because of their eating habits, you must also breed crickets. If one beardie eats 12 crickets a day plus veggies and you have 100 beardies to feed, you are going to be busy. When they used to sell for $250.ea., it was easy work. Now that they are selling for $35.ea. , the hobby is still interesting and I'm still passionate about it; I just don't smile as much. If you want to make money in this hobby, breed crickets.
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Old 12-01-04, 06:14 AM   #26
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I breed beardies as well. I am looking into the higher end stuff. For now I have 3 females and 2 males. I go through easy 5000 to 7000 crickets each week plus veggies, heat,electric, substrate, it is hard to "make a profit". Now I am going to breed snakes as well to help with that "profit margin" I guess you can call it. Here I can sell my dragons to a pet store for 45 each and that is a order under 10. Privatly they go for 80-120 easy.

I am not in it for the money, but this is my business and yes I could do it full time soon. I am looking at investing alot of time and money soon to make a profit and live off of it. It might take another year or two but it will happen.
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Old 12-01-04, 07:22 AM   #27
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I think the key to making a profit in this business is having the starting capital. No matter how you look at it, the higher end the animal, the higher the profit... and I'm not just talking about dollars and cents, but percentages. The more expensive the herp, the more capital intensive it is and then the operating expenses (i.e. food, space, heating, etc... and most importantly, TIME and OPPORTUNITY COST) become a smaller percentage. By definition, profit is revenues less expenses... if the expenses are smaller relative to the revenues, you get a higher return. Heck, with the rate of return on some of the herps out there, it'd easily be worth paying off a prime + 5 interest loan to get your capital.

The problem is making a living... with so many people doing this as a hobby/interest, there are a lot of people who don't factor in the time they spend at all when selling their offspring. This means that the prices don't reflect the true costs, making it much more difficult for someone to make a full-time living. However, there are several advantages to increased volume including economies of scale and marketing becomes that much easier when you have hundreds of satisfied customers each year getting the word out as opposed to the handful you'd get otherwise.

Anyway, if you want to generate a true profit, breed expensive animals. If you're willing to write off all your time and not get any monetary compensation though, just breed whatever you want and it will make you happy and hopefully a bit of money to buy more herps.
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Old 12-01-04, 09:07 PM   #28
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The trick is to also know what is going to be popular. The Ball Python craze is a good example. If you were to invest into some nice pairs today; by the time they are breeding age the market could be already flooded. Timing obviously plays a large part. I would still rather take a chance on Ball Pythons than to buy Nortel stock.
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Old 12-02-04, 02:19 AM   #29
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REBECCA:

This whole hobby is just that - a hobby, even though many people and myself hold large collections not all of us are looking to tip the fortune 500, although many think that way somewhere in the midst of the hobby. I get asked that alot and my answer is always this.

"I research the animals I wish to collect, raise them, care for them, and possibly breed them with some luck. In doing this they do use up financial funds and with breeding them I hope to at least break even and possible evolve the facility to the next degree to only provide even better lifestyles for them."

Cya...

Tony
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