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Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
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"Stud Fee"
You hear the term "stud fee" bandied about with dogs. But what about snakes? I'm interested because I have a male who's ready, but no female big enough to pair him with.
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Re: "Stud Fee"
People who have a breeding will have a detailed contract in which they will stipulates who will get what from the clutch produced , but also who will be responsible in the event a problem arise etc (anything from QT to husbandry to splitting of the animals)
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Re: "Stud Fee"
Just. NO. Avoid it. Because almost 90% a breeding contract will go sour. As not to say every contract has but it's a very slippery slope and trusting someone is a hard thing to do.
Get yourself a nice female of your own, QT her and be happy. Just my opinion.
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Re: "Stud Fee"
your male is a normal anyways so idk what youre trying to achieve...
but check the posts on here about breeding loans and you will find that 9 out of 10 of them are horrible and you will rethink ever doing one.
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Re: "Stud Fee"
Normal males are a dime a dozen, and no one really breeds normals. Well, maybe I should re-phrase that. No one with an adult female to do a breeder loan with, is going to choose a normal male for that breeding loan. Not when she can be used with morphs and combos and produce more morphs rather than normals.
I do agree that entering into a breeding loan is one that should proceed with caution. I happen to be in my 3rd and 4th loan this year with two separate individuals. One, my female is at their facility, the other loan, the female is at mine.
ESPECIALLY with friends, make sure every t is crossed and every i is dotted.
My two previous loans worked out beautifully and I expect the same with the two this year (one is a repeat breeder loan - actually my female just stayed for another season for a different pairing).
However, I know that mine have worked out beautifully because there were no gray areas as far as expectations (replacement value of the animal out on loan should it die, length of time to compensate for loss of animal, who's responsible for vet bills, the person doing the breeding reserves the right to call off the breeding if they feel that it's to the detriment of the health of the animals, and the list goes on and on and on).
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