- Location
- Upper West Side
For some it is a matter of necessity. Let's face it, this is NOT a cheap hobby. For instance, I had to sell frags because my electric bill alone was over $350 per month. It was either sell frags to help defray SOME of the expense or give up my 180. You needed money for whatever reason and you "hated" selling frags, but your circumstances (whatever they were) put you in the akward position.
I think the problem is not that people are selling frags. The problem is that some have made it into a "big" business when in reality they are not doing it seriously or it is a "side" thing to make extra money. Let's face it, when MR first started up and for a few years afterwards it was a great group of friends and like minded individuals that shared a hobby. Since, it has increasingly become more commercial. I am not criticizing, the owner(s) are entitled to cover their costs and get paid for their work. Running a site that is this involved takes a LOT of time and resources and I am sure that it went from being something done part time for fun to actually being work.
I have often given away frags and excess equipment, but I did it because I felt like it, not out of obligation. My reef tank runs me somewhere in the neighborhood of $5,000-$10,000 per year between electric, maintenance, supplies, bulbs, etc. Add to this the roughly $20,000+ I have spent on it and it is safe to say that my corals were far from "free". Under ideal circumstances I would gladly give away frags for free. But when business got ugly and choices had to be made to give up the tank or try to cover part of the expense from selling or trading frags, I chose the option that let me keep my tank. I feel that I did right by every single person that purchased frags from me. For $10-20 I gave them small colonies in most cases.
Unfortunately I lost practically everything to one of the several blackouts, but that is neither here nor there... At least I know that the corals I had still live on and chances are they are being taken good care.
Alfred
I think the problem is not that people are selling frags. The problem is that some have made it into a "big" business when in reality they are not doing it seriously or it is a "side" thing to make extra money. Let's face it, when MR first started up and for a few years afterwards it was a great group of friends and like minded individuals that shared a hobby. Since, it has increasingly become more commercial. I am not criticizing, the owner(s) are entitled to cover their costs and get paid for their work. Running a site that is this involved takes a LOT of time and resources and I am sure that it went from being something done part time for fun to actually being work.
I have often given away frags and excess equipment, but I did it because I felt like it, not out of obligation. My reef tank runs me somewhere in the neighborhood of $5,000-$10,000 per year between electric, maintenance, supplies, bulbs, etc. Add to this the roughly $20,000+ I have spent on it and it is safe to say that my corals were far from "free". Under ideal circumstances I would gladly give away frags for free. But when business got ugly and choices had to be made to give up the tank or try to cover part of the expense from selling or trading frags, I chose the option that let me keep my tank. I feel that I did right by every single person that purchased frags from me. For $10-20 I gave them small colonies in most cases.
Unfortunately I lost practically everything to one of the several blackouts, but that is neither here nor there... At least I know that the corals I had still live on and chances are they are being taken good care.
Alfred
Sorry I'm not letting you slide here. I've given away a gazillion more corals for free on this site than the amount I made selling that one time. The point is, for some of us, this a hobby and not an opportunity to make money or even break even and for some, unlike your quite strong suggestion, it is not cheap fast growing "worthless" corals that we give away, but simply any coral that has grown to the point of needing fragging. If I pay $80 for a coral, I buy it because I want it. If It grows to the point of being fraggable, I don't view it as an opportunity to recoup my $80, I view it as an opportunity to spread the coral around.
This is the way the hobby used to be for the majority of us. Sadly, IMO it is now something very different.
And no I didn't pay a premium for most of my coral, in fact I didn't pay at all for much of it which is exactly my point. Most of it came from trading with or being paid back by like minded hobbyists.