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I personally am not nearly as enamored by Furcifer pardalis as I am with most other species. Because I find other species that much more appealing, the prices of F. pardalis exceed what I'm willing to pay for them. As a result, I simply do not work with them. If other people are willing to pay those prices, I'm happy for the breeder and the buyer if they are happy, but it isn't for me.
My issue is not with the price F. pardalis is able to command but with the price those who produce far rarer and more difficult species are forced to sell their offspring for. I fully understand its an issue of low demand because of a cheaper alternative, but when the supply of that lesser quality alternative (WC specimens of the same species) is so high that the price for that lesser quality alternative makes production of high quality CB/CH specimens pointless, there is a real problem. Such scenarios are far too common with chameleons and result in huge exportation of many species from the wild, huge mortality rates of those animals that are exported, little-to-no efforts to produce captive bred alternatives, and ultimately, when the export shuts down, which it is going to do at some point, the animals disappear from the captive market.
Chris
Chris, I totally agree with your comments and I often wonder, what it would take to elevate other chameleon species in the eye of the hobbyist? I personally started with Fischers and they still remain my favourite. Its hard to understand why there is less appeal for these chams.
Will the more obscure chams become popular with time, as the hobby matures or does it require a large educational/ promotional effort?
Jr
I don't disagree with you at all. It's called "the Paris Hilton" effect. I won't own a panther for many reasons mostly they are ugly and unnatural looking , beside being too trendy. They are obviously not in short supply either and have exceeded demand. At the same time you have people selling their used panthers trying to get top dollar which is insane. Sometimes it makes me question the intelligence of chameleon owners.
Look at the mutt dog industry, they change the name to designer dogs. And now they are the trendy dogs to own, in the past you couldn't give em away.
Eventually it corrects itself. When the new "it" breed comes around.
If panthers are "trendy" then they have been trendy for almost 20 yrs. Actually the prices of panthers has dropped considerably in the last 10 yrs. Back in the mid 90's panthers went for a min of $300 and up. And it didnt matter if they were ambanja, nosy be, etc... Now the only pardalis you can charge that much for are the rare locales like falys, mitsios, ankaramy, & a cpl more. The common stuff like ambi's, banjas, be's can be had for half that price.
Bottom line is ppl like beautiful flashy things. Whether it be animals or jewelry the bling factor has a lot to do with it.
Hogwash, the prices have been the same since captive breeding began on them. The only time they were higher is when the only ones available were wc's. Now the bloodlines are so diluted for the trendy buyers pretty toys. Look at pictures in books 20 years or older and compare them to current panthers, they were designer bred for the trendy market. Just like the orchid market.
I appreciate that you have made it quite clear and agree that they are nothing more than a designer pet. They aren't bling and shouldn't be treated as such. If you enjoy overpaying for stuff I'm sure Dulce and Hardy know your name already.
And you know this how? I was a member of the Cin and have been breeding off and on for over 10 yrs. How many yrs exp do you have? I know what ppl were paying for ambanjas and true blue nosy be's in the 90's. And it wasnt $150.00. In fact a true blue nosy be cost about the same as a parsonni back then. I can remember the first guy I saw with actual cb blue nosys and he was selling them for $600 a piece and they went fast too.
I dont consider my chams "bling" all i was trying to say was flashy animals tend to sell for higher prices. Your just arguing for the sake of arguing your point....
So tell me how many clutches have you produced or sold?
It's why you don't see the little brown finches in pet stores but you see the bright yellow and orange canaries for $120+
People like color, you can't blame them. It's why people pay a little more to have a red or blue car, instead of a beige one.
Not to say that rarer species are "beige," because there are certainly some that I think are lovely, but you can't blame people (myself included) for wanting to go for the bright, solid red and blue striped animal.
Plus, like I said earlier, we tend to scare others from trying out those species on this forum. We make it sound like you have keep a veiled years before you can try anything "harder" than a panther. And this may not be true in the case of everyone, but we make them sound really scary, probably unduly so. So it's bound to turn people off to trying other species.
From 77-84 I owned and operated Devol's pets in orange, ca. During which time we supplied Kmart and Five&Dime stores in southern cal with all their reptiles and fish. In 86-91 we strictly sold at the La Mirada outdoor market, selling chinchillas, ferrets, tegus , pythons and Jackson as well as various turtles and supplies. In 92 I purchased the Shirt Factory and became a reptile hobbyist until 99. In 2000 I opened my first dispensary and currently own 5 in California as well as 2 medical facilities in Oregon. Needless to say I have done my fair share of breeding most likely before you were born. I no longer hold any of my importer licenses except for Czech glass. Chameleons are my hobby not my business and being in the industry long enough I can spot the trends a mile a way. Pathers are gonna be the new Blue pits. It's a trend. That's it. I'm not saying I have made my fair share of wealth from trends but I find the morals of most chameleon breeders to be shady at best. When we start seeing genetic bloodline tracing then I can accept the pricing at it's current state it's just someones say so and pictures of selective breeding. I can trace my dogs genetics back with documented proof can't say that about my chameleons.