scottrussell
New member
i will preface this post to say that it's not about weather breeding snakes as an investment is good/bad but just weather or not it is in fact profitable.
now i'm a novice snake owner. i have a few corns that are for both pets and for breeding once they are big enough. when i was younger, like in middle school i had a boa, and lizards, chameleons etc too and just gotten back into them recently.
now everyone knows how addictive snakes are once you get a couple, so just for fun i scour over kingsnake every few days and other various websites to pickup what kinds of phases are available and how much each type costs...and this is for all snakes not just corns. i typically look around corns, ball pythons, and boas. now it just seems to me like taking two snakes that are worth 2 grand each and breeding them, selling their babies for that much just seems a little too simplified. even on mike wilbank's site he says that doing this is a good investment; his friend buys a pastel ball python and makes about 3 grand off it per year just doing that. now what if you decided to breed say...an albino boa. it would make sense to sell pastel balls for like 1500 because ball pythons on average have like 7 eggs. why is it that you can breed two albino boas together, have them birth 20-50 babies and sell them for a grand each? does it really work this way? are people stuck with 25 neonate albino boas cause only 5 people wanted to buy them at 1000 dollars each? or is there that much demand in the snake market that THAT many people want snakes that cost several hundred dollars? this is just all out of interest of course; its not meant to start an argument that its a rotten thing to do..to breed rare snakes to make a buck, but rather how big is the snake market actually? i really have no clue. i've also notice if you regularly check the kingsnake classifieds about 50% of the ads on there are constantly being recycled and just posted again...which leads me to believe that all the snakes being produced today aren't being bought?
now i'm a novice snake owner. i have a few corns that are for both pets and for breeding once they are big enough. when i was younger, like in middle school i had a boa, and lizards, chameleons etc too and just gotten back into them recently.
now everyone knows how addictive snakes are once you get a couple, so just for fun i scour over kingsnake every few days and other various websites to pickup what kinds of phases are available and how much each type costs...and this is for all snakes not just corns. i typically look around corns, ball pythons, and boas. now it just seems to me like taking two snakes that are worth 2 grand each and breeding them, selling their babies for that much just seems a little too simplified. even on mike wilbank's site he says that doing this is a good investment; his friend buys a pastel ball python and makes about 3 grand off it per year just doing that. now what if you decided to breed say...an albino boa. it would make sense to sell pastel balls for like 1500 because ball pythons on average have like 7 eggs. why is it that you can breed two albino boas together, have them birth 20-50 babies and sell them for a grand each? does it really work this way? are people stuck with 25 neonate albino boas cause only 5 people wanted to buy them at 1000 dollars each? or is there that much demand in the snake market that THAT many people want snakes that cost several hundred dollars? this is just all out of interest of course; its not meant to start an argument that its a rotten thing to do..to breed rare snakes to make a buck, but rather how big is the snake market actually? i really have no clue. i've also notice if you regularly check the kingsnake classifieds about 50% of the ads on there are constantly being recycled and just posted again...which leads me to believe that all the snakes being produced today aren't being bought?