snakegetters
Aunty Venom
Re: i agree
A WC import animal that has had plenty of time to recover from the stress of importation and has been properly diagnosed and treated by an experiened person for any problems is a pretty good candidate for somebody's collection, yep. The determining factor is whether or not they are cleared as "good to go" with appropriate diagnostics before being sold. I like to see a couple of clean fecals before sending anything off.
One of our finished projects (trauma injured import after thorough veterinary exam and treatment and months of support care) is actually a better health risk than a CB animal that has never had a vet exam or a fecal. However were I to attempt sell these animals for anything even approaching the cost of their care, I am sure there would be much kicking and shrieking, especially since some are scarred or imperfect after what they've been through.
One of our latest projects is a $200 cottonmouth that some asshat shot through the neck with a pellet gun BEFORE calling our snake removal service. Fortunately the injury was soft tissue only and the little girl has recovered beautifully from surgery; her last check-up was yesterday and she has been officially pronounced healthy with very little scarring and no loss of function.
I don't imagine anyone will want to buy this pretty little girl, despite an absolutely guaranteed clean bill of health. She'd be slated for release except that she'd just run into the same problem again where she came from. So what to do with a $200 cottonmouth? LOL Keep her, I guess. She's a cutie.
jefjen said:i do agree with you on this.. The point i was making about them being no worse than c.b.b. animals again falls on the way they are treated once they hit this country..
A WC import animal that has had plenty of time to recover from the stress of importation and has been properly diagnosed and treated by an experiened person for any problems is a pretty good candidate for somebody's collection, yep. The determining factor is whether or not they are cleared as "good to go" with appropriate diagnostics before being sold. I like to see a couple of clean fecals before sending anything off.
One of our finished projects (trauma injured import after thorough veterinary exam and treatment and months of support care) is actually a better health risk than a CB animal that has never had a vet exam or a fecal. However were I to attempt sell these animals for anything even approaching the cost of their care, I am sure there would be much kicking and shrieking, especially since some are scarred or imperfect after what they've been through.
One of our latest projects is a $200 cottonmouth that some asshat shot through the neck with a pellet gun BEFORE calling our snake removal service. Fortunately the injury was soft tissue only and the little girl has recovered beautifully from surgery; her last check-up was yesterday and she has been officially pronounced healthy with very little scarring and no loss of function.
I don't imagine anyone will want to buy this pretty little girl, despite an absolutely guaranteed clean bill of health. She'd be slated for release except that she'd just run into the same problem again where she came from. So what to do with a $200 cottonmouth? LOL Keep her, I guess. She's a cutie.