Re: Male vs female pricing
Quote:
Originally Posted by
snakehobbyist
You also have to remember that with a stud (a horse stud, for example), You can have other people's mares breed to him in a pasture setting or you can collect/freeze/ship his semen. That way you can maximize the number of offspring he can produce. But with snakes, you don't generally do that. You can loan a male out, but you certainly can't collect his semen an artificially inseminate every female. That's what makes females so much more valuable. If you want to breed him to a bunch of females, you have to actually have the females to do so...thus making the cost of obtaining these females so much more.
I tend to agree with this line of thinking. It's primarily because females are much more in demand than males.
Re: Male vs female pricing
Its not like that for all morphs. Also I imagine it has something to do with females taking up to 3 years to get to breeding size and they are more in demand. I have been seeing more and more lately males that are outpricing respective females so maybe the market is shifting. Ive wondered this as well.
Re: Male vs female pricing
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Deborah
You need to think in therms of combos :gj:
Your example of Lesser is true Normal to lesser will yeld the same results regardless of the way you are doing it however you need to think as a business person who makes an investment or collector wanting to better their personal collection.
Your male lesser bred to normal females will only produce more of the same this is hardly an investment, just more lessers.
If you get a female lesser now you will not breed her to a normal male (business wise this makes NO SENSE) you will breed her to another morph and will be on your way to make combos.
As a breeder you obviously do not want to breed a low end male to a high end female!
You need females to make combos and females are often held back by breeders and harder to find (at least with mid to high range mutations)
^ This.
If I were to purchase the 3 proven Lesser females in your example for 3K. I could potentially make my money back in one clutch if I hit the odds when breeding them to a multigene male.
Edit: Coming from an Ag background I see what you are talking about. We breed quarter horses and stud fees and sale prices of good studs far exceed the cost of the mares. At the end of the day this is a different business where supply and demand rule.