hiriki
Well-known member
- Oct 19, 2014
- 543
- 749
- Parrots
- (Birdie - Jenday Conure)
(Kiwi - Green Cheek Conure)
(Elby - Lovebird)
(Gorou - Ringneck Dove)
I've been thinking recently that it might be fun to sell my chop. I had one acquaintance through a pigeon rescue where I volunteer ask to buy some of it for her greys and it just got me thinking. But I'm not sure if it's worth it or if anyone out there would be interested and wanted to poll the bird community.
I know there's a dried chop on the market--Birdie Bistro I believe? And given the relative difficulty of shipping frozen foods, I do think that the dried chop is much more scalable and sustainable for a business you want to grow. But I don't really want to do that... I just want to share my chop recipe on a small scale and make it easier for a handful of people to feed veggies to their pets. I was thinking about calling around and finding one location (either a vet or a brick and mortar exotics focused pet store) where I can have a freezer and physically stock my chop.
If your vet was selling reasonably priced frozen veggie chop, would you be interested in buying? If so, what is a reasonable price? How would you want them to be packaged? Right now, I store them in the same ice cube tray where I freeze them after making it, but it's a really nice & relatively expensive tray (it has silicon on the bottom to assist with popping out the cubes) so I don't think I'd want to include that if selling the chop, but they would all stick in a mass in a bag together if they're not individually wrapped to some extent. I thought about cupcake paper or something that I could individually wrap them in but could also be used when feeding the bird as a forage activity... I actually tested it, and my chop is dry enough that the cupcake liner wasn't soggy after thawing, but I'm genuinely not sure if anyone other than me thinks that's a good idea lol
I would really like to hear everyone's thoughts. I have a pretty long relationship with my exotic vet, and I think he would hear me out if I suggested this, but I have been kind of too shy to bring it up because I'm genuinely unsure if there's a market for this. I feel like I would have bought it, had I happened upon it before finding my own chop routine, but idk.
I know there's a dried chop on the market--Birdie Bistro I believe? And given the relative difficulty of shipping frozen foods, I do think that the dried chop is much more scalable and sustainable for a business you want to grow. But I don't really want to do that... I just want to share my chop recipe on a small scale and make it easier for a handful of people to feed veggies to their pets. I was thinking about calling around and finding one location (either a vet or a brick and mortar exotics focused pet store) where I can have a freezer and physically stock my chop.
If your vet was selling reasonably priced frozen veggie chop, would you be interested in buying? If so, what is a reasonable price? How would you want them to be packaged? Right now, I store them in the same ice cube tray where I freeze them after making it, but it's a really nice & relatively expensive tray (it has silicon on the bottom to assist with popping out the cubes) so I don't think I'd want to include that if selling the chop, but they would all stick in a mass in a bag together if they're not individually wrapped to some extent. I thought about cupcake paper or something that I could individually wrap them in but could also be used when feeding the bird as a forage activity... I actually tested it, and my chop is dry enough that the cupcake liner wasn't soggy after thawing, but I'm genuinely not sure if anyone other than me thinks that's a good idea lol
I would really like to hear everyone's thoughts. I have a pretty long relationship with my exotic vet, and I think he would hear me out if I suggested this, but I have been kind of too shy to bring it up because I'm genuinely unsure if there's a market for this. I feel like I would have bought it, had I happened upon it before finding my own chop routine, but idk.