Post by kevinkk on Jun 7, 2019 14:10:35 GMT -8
I just wrote a lengthy and detailed post about the above topic, went to submit it, and the computer had kicked me off.
I'm nauseous now.
Some of you have seen my recent "bad trade with buyer posts" I'd like to hear from other breeders- not buyers, about who is responsible for
what, and why.
Discuss here in the forum, or email me kevinkoffel@gmail.com
Ok,I took a break and am ready to get out my soap box.
First- my opinion about my responsibility- I am responsible to send viable ova, and I do that by only sending ova from witnessed pairings, or wild caught
females. I am responsible for sending live pupa or cocoons, I do that by looking at them and weighing them.
I am responsible for posting to the correct address, or at least the one given.
That's it. Once I take the package to the post office, I leave without it, and have no further control. I send ova that are collected daily, placed in a dated
container and sent in flat rate priority boxes. The pupa I ship are hardened and ready for winter, or at least a short diapause.
I've recently had people claim that I am responsible for moths not hatching , or the post office taking 7 days to go from Oregon to California.
This is a hobby, and we are shipping living organisms, and living things are unpredictable. I don't feel I have to assume all the risk for every thing I send
out, if the parcel is lost- blame the post office, not me, if the moths fail to hatch, blame nature, not me, or the way they were cared for while not in my
custody. Apparently, some buyers, and a few sellers, want to emulate the 100% guarantee they get form Ebay, or Amazon, well, then please don't
buy my livestock, because, after my ethical responsibility I already outlined is fulfilled, the buyer is going to have to assume some risk.
I take losses all the time for all kinds of reasons, and don't whine and complain about it.
I just got a lecture from someone who thinks I should eat every postal issue, or every infertile egg that pops up invariably, 100% hatch rates are not
always the norm. Well, I'm interested in hearing from breeders, not buyers about these issues. I don't make a living doing this, and look at my offerings
almost as a favor to the hobby, a way to spread around my good fortune, or contacts that someone else doesn't have, bottom line, for me, if I have to
guarantee every single thing will be perfect, I'll sell deadstock, or to people I already know, or make people print and sign a waiver. This is free trade between
individuals, and I don't force anyone to buy anything, and in fact, go into detail often relating my experiences with particular species, giving people the most
information I can so they can make a comfortable decision, recently a buyer changed their mind, because after emailing, decided they weren't sure about
having the right food plant. Super! That's what I am here for, to share my experience, and knowledge. After over 20 years being self employed as a contractor,
I've learned all about the public and how not everyone is reasonable.
Email me, or discuss it here, I'd love to hear why I'm right, and only mildly interested in why I'm wrong.. but I'll talk to you about it.