Posted by:
reiko
at Thu Aug 21 19:19:54 2003 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by reiko ]
which generally is true, but not always, you dont even wanna know what i bought carrick for, but i can tell ya it was less then 60 bucks...the most important thing is not price, you need to, like you said, get info on the breeder, the dragons, and as much info you can on the parents etc, get references when you can, talk to others that have bought from them, see their setup if possible, make an informed choice. I dont think Cheri meant that if a dragon is cheap its crap, but rather dont shop for a bargain and look at price only, take all factors into consideration.
>>Im not trying to be rude at all, its just you make it sound like if something is 60 dollars it must not be any good. I spent 55 on mine and its turned out great! I understand what your saying, but I'm just trying to clarify that just because an animal is 60 as opposed to the 150 one on the same page does NOT nessarily mean that it of "lesser" quality. It just means (usually that is) that it is not some fancy trait. I didnt buy for color, I bought for size and personality and cheap price (Im into many other expensive hobbies, but I do NOT take less care than my animals need just because they are expensive, they are my #1 priority in my budget).
>>
>>Again, I'm not trying to rude. Before you buy just scope out the breeder. Have you heard of them? Do they look like someone you could talk to eaisly? Do they give you a caresheet or make SURE you know what your doing? The thing that convinced me that this breeder was ok was she was selling parazap on the same table along with the other vitamins.
>>
>>Hope you dont take this the wrong way,
>>louis ----- reiko 
photos

[ Show Entire Thread ]
|