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Best reptile species to breed
Soon I am going to start a small reptile buisness and I have 4 ball pythons that will be great for breeding but I am wondering what other species would be good? Or if I should just keep getting
ball pythons
Thanks.
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Re: Best reptile species to breed
 Originally Posted by Tyler Lawrence
Soon I am going to start a small reptile buisness and I have 4 ball pythons that will be great for breeding but I am wondering what other species would be good? Or if I should just keep getting
ball pythons
Thanks.
Ok so business means profit mean having a plan and basically you ask others to make a plan for YOUR business? That to me is the first sign that you need to reconsider your idea.
People who start a business have a business plan (short and long term goals, financials etc), they also know the market, it's not just about what is easy to breed there are tons of things easy to breed but are they are not profitable, is the market already saturated? What type of sizable investment are you willing to make?
Small profitable business will be at least 30 to 60 animals if you want to be profitable and we are not talking single gene animals like Spider, Pinstripe, pastel Cinny etc, if you want to be on the lower side with 30 animals it will take you VERY HIGH END ANIMALS, of course you have to re-invest every year and upgrade your collection.
Also remember part of the business is passion, breeding something because it's easy does not mean it's enjoyable or that you will be passionate about that species and if you are not, you will fail.
If you do not have an idea on either of those things or really do not have that much to invest, than this is not gonna be a business it's gonna be a small hobby that might not even pay for itself and if that is the case breed what you like, do it for YOU, first thing of course is to know the species you like, have hands on experience and only then consider breeding.
Not trying to shatter your dreams but business small or big means having a plan and I am not seeing this and sadly to many people every year jump into this head first and 5 years later have a collection sale because they were just lacking that plan, passion and commitment.
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The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to Stewart_Reptiles For This Useful Post:
Bogertophis (07-04-2018),BPGator (07-04-2018),Craiga 01453 (07-04-2018),GoingPostal (07-05-2018),Slicercrush (07-05-2018),Team Slytherin (07-04-2018)
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Re: Best reptile species to breed
 Originally Posted by deborah
ok so business means profit mean having a plan and basically you ask others to make a plan for your business? That to me is the first sign that you need to reconsider your idea.
People who start a business have a business plan (short and long term goals, financials etc), they also know the market, it's not just about what is easy to breed there are tons of things easy to breed but are they are not profitable, is the market already saturated? What type of sizable investment are you willing to make?
Small profitable business will be at least 30 to 60 animals if you want to be profitable and we are not talking single gene animals like spider, pinstripe, pastel cinny etc, if you want to be on the lower side with 30 animals it will take you very high end animals, of course you have to re-invest every year and upgrade your collection.
Also remember part of the business is passion, breeding something because it's easy does not mean it's enjoyable or that you will be passionate about that species and if you are not, you will fail.
If you do not have an idea on either of those things or really do not have that much to invest, than this is not gonna be a business it's gonna be a small hobby that might not even pay for itself and if that is the case breed what you like, do it for you, first thing of course is to know the species you like, have hands on experience and only then consider breeding.
Not trying to shatter your dreams but business small or big means having a plan and i am not seeing this and sadly to many people every year jump into this head first and 5 years later have a collection sale because they were just lacking that plan, passion and commitment.
^^^ truth ^^^
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Re: Best reptile species to breed
 Originally Posted by Tyler Lawrence
Soon I am going to start a small reptile buisness and I have 4 ball pythons that will be great for breeding but I am wondering what other species would be good? Or if I should just keep getting
ball pythons
Thanks.
Ball pythons are popular: as pets, but also in terms of all the breeders that have a big head start on you. No matter what you decide to breed, please FIRST consider
that the market may already be saturated, or will be by the time your animals are of breeding age. Remember too that snakes are living creatures that sometimes
don't reproduce as expected, or have difficulty doing so, & may sometimes have other health problems too that COSTS you money...it's not always as lucrative as
you might imagine. Flooding the market with snakes that you are forced to sell cheaply is not a recipe for success, nor is it kind to the animals (because people have
little "skin in the game" they are less likely to take proper care of them)...just saying. You need serious planning & I wouldn't "quit your day job".
I think the best breeders are those who love what they're working with, care about them, & aren't dependent upon making a buck...I hope that's you?
Last edited by Bogertophis; 07-04-2018 at 04:14 PM.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Bogertophis For This Useful Post:
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If you want to breed for profit then look at what sells fast when ads go up:
- Pure locality boa of known and documented lineage
- Pythons like Angolans, Olives, Papuans, Mackots, Savus
- Eastern indigoes
- DRMB's, BRB's
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Nothing.... nothing is the thing that you should be breeding until you yourself see something that interests you and makes you want to breed it. If there is no passion, don't even think about it.
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Alter-Echo For This Useful Post:
Bogertophis (07-04-2018),Craiga 01453 (07-04-2018),Lord Sorril (07-05-2018),Slicercrush (07-05-2018)
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