Red-Ink
Very Well-Known Member
Jamie
No one is questioning the knowledge and after care support breeders provide in fact that's what makes you a good breeder and therefore will be a reputable one.. The problem seems to be is the assumption put into new/first time breeders that they wont look after the welfare or do not have the knowledge to do so... How are they meant to acquire that knowledge if we are discouraging them from breeding?
You're telling me it's a subjective rhetoric of "it's my right to do whatever I want, whenever I want to..."
Is,... "breeding's hard, you don't know what your in for... you shouldn't do it..." not a subjective rhetoric from breeders as well... If they found it that hard why repeat the process year in year out?
The flood of the market on reptiles seems to be at the core of these debates, arguments such as cheap reptiles are disposable reptiles to an extent I'm sure that happens, but waht also happens on the other side of the coin is somebody having a reptile for a value they can afford adding to the numbers of reptile keepers. Is that not our main weapon in the fight against bureaucracy? How are we going to grow the hobby if there are no reptiles out there.... It's not just new/first time breeders that flood the market.... I can understand why newbs breed their reptiles , they've never done it before and again want to experience it.. legitimate don't you think? So in an already flooded market with the knowledge of breeders that newbies lack in it's "effects" in the hobby, ask yourself why would they breed that year as well if they know there's going to be a flood of reptiles?
Instead of discouraging new breeders from seeking the knowledge through breeding maybe we should flip the coin and discourage people who have already gone through it from doing it again....?
No one is questioning the knowledge and after care support breeders provide in fact that's what makes you a good breeder and therefore will be a reputable one.. The problem seems to be is the assumption put into new/first time breeders that they wont look after the welfare or do not have the knowledge to do so... How are they meant to acquire that knowledge if we are discouraging them from breeding?
You're telling me it's a subjective rhetoric of "it's my right to do whatever I want, whenever I want to..."
Is,... "breeding's hard, you don't know what your in for... you shouldn't do it..." not a subjective rhetoric from breeders as well... If they found it that hard why repeat the process year in year out?
The flood of the market on reptiles seems to be at the core of these debates, arguments such as cheap reptiles are disposable reptiles to an extent I'm sure that happens, but waht also happens on the other side of the coin is somebody having a reptile for a value they can afford adding to the numbers of reptile keepers. Is that not our main weapon in the fight against bureaucracy? How are we going to grow the hobby if there are no reptiles out there.... It's not just new/first time breeders that flood the market.... I can understand why newbs breed their reptiles , they've never done it before and again want to experience it.. legitimate don't you think? So in an already flooded market with the knowledge of breeders that newbies lack in it's "effects" in the hobby, ask yourself why would they breed that year as well if they know there's going to be a flood of reptiles?
Instead of discouraging new breeders from seeking the knowledge through breeding maybe we should flip the coin and discourage people who have already gone through it from doing it again....?
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