Yes. Yes it isThat is great and your choice.
Not paying vendor prices is even better!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yes. Yes it isThat is great and your choice.
R2R tries to curb this by 30 days minimum membership and a minimum # of posts.Forums are a place for information. A few sales are ok, but if your only threads are selling threads then it becomes a business.
Dont like it?
Dont buy it......order from a vendor lol.
Filing claims with credit card companies on a piece of coral that dies long after recieving is pretty childish.
Luckly MOST of my buyers dont need refunds and are repeat customers
Its all about establishing trust.
I understand it’s buy at your own risk but but still I believe there should be some more liability on both side of the sale. As I said originally a buyer should understand the requirement of a coral and the seller should make sure that the buyer knows that.I’ve never understood people being upset that other people don’t do what they want them to. If you don’t want the risk than don’t buy... the market determines what the majority are willing to risk.
This seems to ignore the entire point of the OP. Can you tell the difference between a sick coral vs one that just has retracted polyps the second you open the bag? Every coral I've ordered online (except maybe some shrooms) has looked shrivelled up and stresssed from spending the night in a bag. You're basically saying "the buyer should be a marine biologist and be able to tell a sick coral right away".Well if the buyer doesn't complain within the two (or even one) hour given, that means that either the coral arrived fine and got sick from being in the tank, the buyer didn't look closely enough to determine if it arrived fine, or the buyer does see that it didn't arrive fine but doesn't want to make a claim.
All three aren't really the sellers fault and the policy prevents a large amount of case 1 happening and people claiming case 2 or 3 and wanting their money back.
When i buy stuff online, especially from private sellers, i send the seller pictures of what arrived either way. If it looks bad i just change the text. Making a claim doesn't only mean that you immediately toss it in the trash and get your money back. If a coral doesn't look so hot, you can still send the seller a picture of it and then agree on monitoring it for a few days and then seeing whether it'll spring back or you get your money back. It's in the sellers financial interest to agree to doing that, they might even suggest it. That's still "making a claim", and very different from saying nothing for days and then suddenly "my coral is white, i want my money back".This seems to ignore the entire point of the OP. Can you tell the difference between a sick coral vs one that just has retracted polyps the second you open the bag? Every coral I've ordered online (except maybe some shrooms) has looked shrivelled up and stresssed from spending the night in a bag. You're basically saying "the buyer should be a marine biologist and be able to tell a sick coral right away".
This type of attitude also incentivizes buyers to make claims on corals that might or might not survive instead of trying to save it. For a fish, if you saw signs of it dying, you might be financially better off flushing the fish instead of putting it in QT/hospital, just because you can say it died. Which is bad for everyone involved, most of all the fish.
Exactly! Just go and help keep your lfs in business
Another reason to buy local.
This seems to ignore the entire point of the OP. Can you tell the difference between a sick coral vs one that just has retracted polyps the second you open the bag? Every coral I've ordered online (except maybe some shrooms) has looked shrivelled up and stresssed from spending the night in a bag. You're basically saying "the buyer should be a marine biologist and be able to tell a sick coral right away".
This type of attitude also incentivizes buyers to make claims on corals that might or might not survive instead of trying to save it. For a fish, if you saw signs of it dying, you might be financially better off flushing the fish instead of putting it in QT/hospital, just because you can say it died. Which is bad for everyone involved, most of all the fish.
I am not currently selling corals so please don't get the idea I'm advertising here.Ive been noticing a trend (more like a tradition) in the marketplace that people sell their corals and fish with a 2 hour or so DOA (Dead on Arrival) now as I look at this I started to wonder... what the heck does that mean. Does it mean if your coral comes bleached, which doesn’t happen in such a short time, the guy will give you a refund. Or does it mean that a fish that comes breathing heavily and upside down will not be refunded. The logic in this is that NO There is no insurance for the buyer not only will your coral coral come slightly alive but will die in the next hour but that’s not a sellers fault... RIGHT. When I look at someone selling a master torch or OG torch for 1500$ and on the bottom it says standard 2 hour DOA. Not only does that mean that they won’t ensure that it survives after getting to your house but if you don’t report it within 2 HOURS of arriving he won’t refund you either. Now this hasn’t happened to me but the thought someone could be so obnoxious and rude to do something like this to this community hurts my soul. If you are confident that your coral is healthy and are a responsible seller selling something rare and of great value, is it not your obligation to discuss with your buyer if his tanks ready and then if so Insure your product for at least 24 hours after arrival (and even that’s pushing it)