Clay Davenport
Cerebral Nomad
So do you quiz recreational skydivers as to why they choose jumping out of a perfectly good airplane as an enjoyable hobby?Griz said:It is a natural fascination that I have as to what makes people take certain risks. Is the enjoyment they receive worth the risk and if so, why? I am truly fascinated by it.
I accept, wholeheartedly, that you and whomever else enjoy these animals. What I was puzzled about is how that enjoyment supercedes the risks involved. I think anyone would find that very fascinating to say the least.
Griz
I would assume the same curiosity would lead you to do so. The most common answer in that case is the thrill of the free fall. To a person who doesn't find that thrilling though, the answer does nothing to make them understand. It only causes them to be more baffled by the pursuit. Now it's not only why do you jump out of planes, but also why do you find hurtling toward the ground to be thrilling.
While I do not keep hots for the thrill, any reason given only leads to more questions. The reasons you gave may work to an extent to explain why one keeps reptiles, but they are inadequate when explaining why one keeps hots. Every reason you gave, if used in the context of keeping venomous is easily countered by saying, "but there are nonvenomous (i.e. harmless) snakes that fulfill that", and that is exactly what happens and what would most likely have happened in this thread.
To merely say you keep them because they're beautiful, or they're fascinating to watch may explain why you like snakes, but not why you choose to go to the next level and keep snakes that can kill you.
The long and short of it is there is no reason or justification at all that will cause someone who doesn't want to keep hots to understand why we do.
I don't care anything about educating people about hots, nor do I care about creating an interest in hots in other reptile keepers. In my opinion it's not an area of the hobby that should be pursued by the vast majority of keepers.
I do not encourage people to keep anything venomous and I do not offer advice on how to do it. I have however discouraged many against keeping venomous. That's just me and the choice I make. That choice however further causes me to not be inclined to explain myself, particularly with the realization that anything said will only serve to draw more questions while never satisfying any curiosity the asker might actually have.
The discussion is a bottomless pit from which there is no escape other than to go around it to begin with.
Ironically we've expended as much if not more energy explaining why we can't explain than we would have if we'd just embarked on the pointless attempt at trying in the first place.