In Episode 10 of Content with Teeth's The Come Up, meet a guest who creates WOW among kids at his sports card store

Find Awe in the Latest Episode of The Come Up

Kids, be prepared for WOW.

Be prepared to be amazed.

Why?

florida sports cards

Because Jonathan Stone, Owner of Blue Breaks LLC, a new sports card collecting and memorabilia store in Venice, Florida, makes an appearance on Episode 10 of The Come Up.

Jonathan is a card collector and former big league sports referee and is Scrappy’s guest on Content with Teeth’s video podcast chronicling dynamic entrepreneurs in Southwest Florida and beyond.

The Come Up Episode 10 Highlights

Sorry eBay: Learn why Jonathan thinks there is no such thing as competition in the sports card world and discover the Blue Breaks niche. It involves thousands of sports cards at a kid-friendly price of a penny a piece.

sports cards store venice florida

The Big Racket: Jonathan details his fascinating background, including umpiring at Wimbledon to the likes of Nadal, Federer and other legends.

sports collectibles

Retail Therapy: If you’re a card-collecting maniac, learn why you should visit a store and not just slum it out on eBay or a trade show for the best selection.

Uh, Teacher, Why Does My Mint Pete Rose Have a C? If you’ve got some old baseball cards stashed away or are a big-time collector, learn the details of sports card grading. Jonathan sheds light on a sometimes arcane process. Don’t miss this section if you’re interested in the value of your collection whether it’s hockey cards or non sports cards.

Catch other key nuggets in Episode 10 of The Come Up like how his wife thinks he’s crazy and how Jonathan’s inspiration is his 9-month newborn and any smiling kid hunting for a deal.

About Jonathan Stone & Content with Teeth

For UnBoring Content like The Come Up, contact Content with Teeth HERE. Find out more about Blue Breaks LLC HERE.

The Come Up Episode 10 Video Transcript

Scrappy:

What up? What up? What up? What up? What up? I’m Scrappy. This is The Come Up, featuring Southwest Florida entrepreneurs. They’re innovators, risk takers and big picture thinkers.

Today, our guest is really cool, really cool. I’m looking forward to this, ’cause I’m a baseball collector myself.

It is Jonathan from Blue Breaks in Venice Beach. He’s got a great store over there. If you want to be our next guest, make sure to check us out at Hey Scrappy on Instagram.

Blue Breaks, tell us about your store. How long you’ve been in business, Jonathan?

Jonathan Stone:

Hey, Scrappy. Well, we’ve been in business three weeks now. We opened the doors three weeks ago. We’ve been primarily online until then. But yeah, no, me, the wife and the nine month old baby decided it was time to take some risks.

We sold our home, moved to the area we’re in now. We’re actually staying with friends at the moment yet. We sold our home and put all of our money into opening a store because we just felt that there’s a space in the market for what we do.

Scrappy:

Okay. So in Venice specifically, do you have competition?

Jonathan Stone:

There’s some other stores in Venice, but I don’t think there’s competition in the sports cards well, because it’s not like McDonald’s, Wendy that all have a burger. They have the same burger.

You can go into every sports card store in the country. Every single store has different cards, has a different product. Not only that, even if they have the same product, when you open a box of sports cards, the cards inside are different in every single box.

So, no, I don’t think there is such a thing as competition in the sports card world. There’s other people that sell sports cards. There’s other people that do similar things.

It’s funny. I was talking to a customer a little while ago. As a collector, you should never only buy what you collect from one store or one person, because every person has a different card, has different types of cards, has different items that you want to collect. This is no different.

Scrappy:

You say you’re different from everybody else. What’s your niche?

Jonathan Stone:

In the store, as well as obviously selling sports cards, we have single sports cards from one penny. So, you can come in the store right now, and we have 30,000 cards that are a penny each, for sale in store right now.

As well as that, we have trade nights. We also do birthday parties for the kids as well.

Scrappy:

Oh, that’s fun. That’s fun. So you’ve been in business for only three weeks. Where do you get all your inventory?

Jonathan Stone:

We do a lot of shopping online. We have distributors. We have contacts within Panini and Topps and things like that as well, that we utilize.

We get as much as we can, from as many different sources, so that our customers come in and have a great weekend.

Scrappy:

Interesting. Interesting. As an entrepreneur, you’re staying at your friend’s house, you’ve put all your money into this. It’s a leap of faith.

Is it something you’re really passionate about or something you see as a business opportunity or both?

Jonathan Stone:

I’ve worked in sport my entire life. I spent 10 years as a tennis umpire. I worked tennis matches at the very top level. I’ve worked Wimbledon. I’ve worked tournaments all over the world. Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal.

I’ve also worked soccer professionally, in multiple countries. And I’ve actually spent two years in baseball. I worked in Independent Professional Baseball league last year. I also do call-up games for the minor leagues.

So as well as that, to me as a collector of sports cards, it’s about filling a gap in the market, where other collectors can actually get their hands on the products they want from somebody who cares.

Scrappy:

Okay. Does your wife think you’re crazy for doing this?

Jonathan Stone:

My wife thought I was crazy before this. This just puts the nail in the coffin. I was crazy long before this.

Scrappy:

Jonathan, I’ve bought cards on eBay. I’ve gone to trade shows. I’ve been to shops. Why should I go to a shop versus eBay or a trade show?

Jonathan Stone:

Because you can come in store. You can handle our cards. You can look at it. You can get the advice you need.

We do products where you can clean your cards in store. We also do products where you can store your cards in the best condition.

Not only that, we submit to graders. We submit cards to PSA. You can actually have a good time in here.

We’ve had a lot of people in here at the weekend. We had people watching the England versus Germany European Soccer final game.

We had people in here buying supplies. We had kids in here. We had a David Becker autographed card come out of a box. We had a Steph Curry card come out of the box.

Scrappy:

Oh, wow. Wow.

Jonathan Stone:

We had a Juan DeFranco card come out of a box yesterday as well. So, we’ve had lots of cards come out over the last few days. You don’t get those experiences anywhere else because at home, you’re on your own. You’re opening cards.

If you go to a show, you’re probably buying the cards. You don’t want to open them at the show ’cause you want them to be protected.

But here you can come in, grab the cards, and we’ll give you the protection you need, so that your cards go home in the same condition they come out of that box in.

Scrappy:

The experience, for sure. That’s really interesting. That’s definitely a differential advantage.

Now, you mentioned kids. What percentage of your customers, at least in the first three weeks, are children versus some avid hardcore collector?

Jonathan Stone:

We have, obviously adults that are regaining their childhood through this. We also have collectors that come in with their kids as well.

It’s funny. A little while ago I had the gentleman come in. Him and his daughter actually collect. They’ve been a great inspiration for me and my wife, because to see them bonding over collecting cards, a guy who did this when he was a child and now his almost teenage daughter, getting into it, coming in and raiding up any boxes for her is just, it’s just an amazing thing, watching them bond.

So I think you’re probably looking at a 50/50 split because most of the kids bring their parents with them.

We do mimosas on a Sunday for the baseball moms, just to keep them happy as well. So, we have a few adults come in, but we do have a lot of kids.

Scrappy:

Are you a sucker for a kid with a smile, that wants a good deal?

Jonathan Stone:

When you have a nine month old baby, you’re a sucker for any kid with a smile. Sucker for any kid with a smile.

Scrappy:

How do you make the transition from being an umpire and a referee and being a sports advocate in that regard, to actually selling your wares, from a baseball card perspective?

Jonathan Stone:

It’s been an interesting transition. This time of year, I’m used to… Normally, I’m away in the summer on a baseball field. It’s been hard this year, being at home. But I think life has changed for me.

Now having our Kalimar baby, it’s giving him something that when he’s two, three, four, five, his interest will pique. He can help out in the shop. It keeps him busy.

But not only that. It’s a family business, that hopefully he’ll carry on in years to come.

Scrappy:

That’s awesome. I can tell just by your personality that you’re breeding something special over there, Jonathan. I can totally feel that.

You mentioned graded. Now, it’s really frustrating to me as a baseball card collector, that I got to send out graded cards. Can you explain the process to our audience?

Jonathan Stone:

Cards are worth different value, depending on their condition. In a sense, in the grading world, you’re grading your card from one to 10, 10 being the best, one being the worst.

Each of those grades, depending on the company and the grade you get, are worth a different value.

So just because it comes fresh out of the box does not mean it’s a 10 out 10 perfect condition card. Errors happen in printing, so it might be slightly off center.

We’ve all had those days where we’re fed up with that little bit of black ink crossing through a couple of letters on the printer. That happens in the card world. So, all of those sort of things affect it.

You can come to us. We’ll clean the card for you. We will send it off to PSA, and then that card comes back with a grade on it.

A grade is no better than a referee or an umpire. It’s just one person you’re, paying to give you an independent opinion on that card.

Scrappy:

How much does it cost?

Jonathan Stone:

It varies from $18 into the hundreds, depending on the value of your card. The annoying thing with grading and it annoys me as a store and as a collector, is the grading cost is dependent upon the value of the card.

So if you turn around and bring in a card that’s worth 30, $40, you might get away with an 18 to $23 charge to have that graded.

But if it’s worth 50, 60, $70,000, then we’re going to start talking thousands of dollars for the exact same process. That’s where it’s frustrating as a collector.

But we have to remember, when all these cards are being handed around and they do have these high values, there’s things like, insurance has to be taken into consideration, because that company is assuming the risk and liability of damaging that card that’s worth thousands of dollars.

Scrappy:

For sure. For sure. I have a 1980 Topps baseball card set. Ricky Henderson’s in there as a rookie. What are the chances that if I get it graded, it’s going to come out spectacular and make me a couple dollars?

Jonathan Stone:

I think there’s a chance with any card, it comes out spectacular. It’s going to depend on how you’ve kept it over the years, making sure it’s in as good a condition as possible.

Not only that, the value of cards changes all the time. David Ortiz got entered into the Hall of Fame this week. The value of his cards will change, based on that.

Players that get called up from the minor leagues into the majors, their card value will change on that.

Touch wood it never happens, when players pass away, their value changes on those cards again. To get the maximum revenue out of your card, if you’re wanting to sell it, is about doing it at the right time.

Scrappy:

Jonathan, it’s so frustrating, because I have probably a hundred cards that I look at, that have so much potential. A nice Pete Rose, a Yaz. I got a 1961 Yaz rookie card. I have all these different cards, but it would cost a fortune for me to be grading them.

Jonathan Stone:

Oh, a hundred percent. I feel your pain. We have about 65,000 cards on the shop floor right now, that if I could only afford to do that, I would.

A lot of collectors want their card in the original condition. They don’t necessarily want it graded.

We talk about when you’re watching again, the baseball purist. There is still plenty of baseball purists out in the card collector world that want it in that original condition.

So, there is pluses and minuses with grading. It’s not always the best idea to throw your money at grading. Sometimes, you know what? It’s best you just love what we have.

Scrappy:

Okay. I have my 1961 Yaz rookie card. It’s in plastic. I’ve kept really good care of it. My dad gave it to me as a gift a long time ago. I still have it. Is it better for me to go on eBay and try to sell it or bring it to your store?

Jonathan Stone:

As a generalization, going on eBay, you’re probably going to get the market value for that card. But don’t forget, you’re going to have a 13% fee, which will be a charge from eBay for selling with them.

So let’s say a card sells for a thousand dollars. You’re going to lose 130 straight away. So, now we’re down to 870. All right?

So you come to me. I’m probably going to offer you 750, $800 for that card. So you’re going to say, “Well, why would I sell to you instead of eBay?”

Remember, when that person gets that card, if they don’t like it, they can return it, and you’ve got to return that money.

When it comes to me, that’s money in your hand. You’re good to go. Let me deal with the problem. Let me deal with the customers because just like anything else, if you mail it out and it gets damaged in the mail, you’ve got to deal with USPS, when it comes to insurance and things like that. I can deal with all of those problems for you.

Scrappy:

I think it’s fascinating that you can just reel off 750, 800, off the top of your head, based on a year and a player and a team. That’s amazing to me.

So in that regard too, then you know how much you can get out of it, selling it to somebody else. So that’s all in your head?

Jonathan Stone:

A hundred percent. So when customers come in to sell to us, one of the things that we believe makes us different from some of the competition is, we will give you a price that we believe is fair.

But not only that, I’m going to tell you the price sticker that I’m going to put on that product on my shelf.

So if I come in and think that card’s worth a hundred dollars, I’m going to tell you straight up, “I’m going to sell this card in store for a hundred dollars.” I will offer you $70 in cash and $85 in store credit, which you can use in the store.

But by being transparent, you know that when you come in, in two, three, four weeks time, you see the price. Oh, you know what? He’s done exactly what he said he’s going to do. So, perhaps this is the guy we can trust.

Rather than you look at the stores all over the country. If you go and sell a card to a store and they give you 50 bucks, and you go in three weeks later and you see your card for $400, is that a store you’re going to keep going back to?

Scrappy:

Right. Right. That’s so smart. That’s really smart. If I get that transparency from a company or a card shop, it’s going to definitely make me want to go there on a regular basis.

That’s really, really smart because we have an attitude as baseball card collectors and avid fans, that we’re going to get screwed over, unfortunately.

Jonathan Stone:

Yeah. I think for me, a lot of stores, all up and down the country, when they go from being… They’re run by collectors. Everybody that opens a card store is generally a collector. We have an interest in this.

But when they start transitioning from that to just a store owner that wants to make money, then we lose the concept of why we opened.

But no, I’m a collector. I know what my card is worth. If I know my card sells on eBay for a hundred dollars or $200, and this person in front of me is offering me 30 or 40, why would I carry on doing business?

I know that the card I’m buying from them, they’re making way too much money on. So look, let’s be transparent. I’ll tell you what I’m going to price it out for in store. I’ll tell you what I think it’s worth, but I’m going to also offer you what I think is a fair price.

If you think it’s fair, you take it. If you don’t and you want to go to eBay, there’s zero hard feelings about that. I think we need to be aware of that, as dealers.

Scrappy:

You mentioned earlier, boxes. Is it better to keep a box intact or to cherry pick out six cards that are valuable?

Jonathan Stone:

No. I think, let’s look at 1986 Fleer basketball, the Michael Jordan rookie cards. The individual packs out of those, I think I saw on eBay, some were selling for $1,500 a pack.

Scrappy:

Wow.

Jonathan Stone:

There’s 40 packs in a box. So, we’re talking $60,000 in a box. That doesn’t happen with every product. The product value’s dependent on the rookie class or the class that’s in that product, each and every year.

But generally, do you know what? Buying some boxes and keeping a hold of them, it’s rare a box will ever go down in value.

Scrappy:

Everybody wants the rookie card. That’s for sure.

Jonathan Stone:

Oh, yeah.

Scrappy:

Kyle Trask, the football player, the quarterback for the Florida Gators, I’m a Florida Gator, I bought a bunch of his cards on speculation.

Of course, I bought Kyle Pitts. I bought a bunch of Kyle Pitts. I bought like 20 rookie cards from him. I don’t really know what I’m doing.

I buy these cards randomly. And then all of a sudden, my friend who knows baseball cards better than me says, “Well, these are still not worth anything because they’re not autographed. They’re not the high end brand.”

When we want to get a rookie card on speculation, somebody in college, that’s going into the pros the following year, how do we buy?

Jonathan Stone:

Let’s all remember one thing. Tom Brady was picked in what, the seventh round? Those were cards at the time, that me and you could’ve probably bought on the equivalent of eBay back then, for 99 cents.

That’s not now. You’ve got to collect who you want to collect, who you enjoy and who you love.

For me every year, I’ll look at a product Bowman draft in baseball. I’ll pick some two or three random names that went maybe in the fifth, sixth, seventh round. I’ll pick two or three. I’ll invest heavily in those cards at 25 cents, 50 cents, a dollar and buy as many of those as I can. The cheaper you buy a card, the less money you are going to lose. It’s like shares.

Scrappy:

Sure. Sure.

Jonathan Stone:

So if I buy a hundred of these cards for 25 cents a piece, the most I’m ever going to lose is $25. But if that player makes it makes his debut in major leagues, the moment he’s called up, that’s when you start to sell.

They’re probably going to be 50, 60, $70 at the time, and then you’ve invested. Then you’re looking at that return of money that you can use to grow and enhance your own personal collection, where you want that one holy grail card that we’re all chasing.

Scrappy:

Have you ever experienced the holy grail card?

Jonathan Stone:

No. No. There’s definitely a few cards in the store, that I wished were… that are on… I’m looking at a couple right now, that are in the cabinets, that I’m wishing was sitting at home and not here.

I think I had a kid come in the other day, who wanted a Mac Jones autograph. We have a Mac Jones card on sale in the store. It’s 500 bucks. He’s like, “I just can’t afford it.”

He was 10, 11 years old. “I have $109 in my savings account,” but this is a lower level product, Leaf. There was a Mac Jones autograph on my shelf for $125.

He was 11 years old. He came back the next day. He gave me the $109. 38 cents that he had. He took his card.

I lost money on that deal. All ends up going back to the kid with the smile. I lost money. But the smile on that kid when he ran across my store and showed his mom, it’s every penny of losing $10.

Scrappy:

You got a customer for life.

Jonathan Stone:

Oh, but isn’t that the thing? Isn’t that thing that we’re all forgetting? Today’s low level customers are tomorrow’s medium level customers and the next day’s big level customers.

Making an impression on kids today… We have a penny section. I don’t charge kids for cards out of the penny section. You come in. You spend an hour. You find 50 cards. You’re 12 years old. I’m not taking 50 cents from you. Do you know what? Have a great day.

But when they come back the next year and buy some 25-cent cards, when they get their collection better, just seeing them grow with their collection, isn’t that what this is about?

I’m here to pay my bills. Look, Let’s look at the business aspect of this. I’m here to pay my bills, but I’m not here to buy a Ferrari. I’m here to give my nine month old baby a future.

By watching other kids slightly older than him, grow up and build their future, and isn’t that aiding my baby’s future as well?

Scrappy:

That’s awesome. That’s awesome.

Jonathan Stone:

The baby comes in store. It’s me and the wife and the baby. I have customers that pick him up. I have kids that interact with him. My nine month old baby’s making memories for other people. Do you know what? That’s it for me. That’s worth more than anything else.

Scrappy:

Your biggest regret, you must have one that you looked at and you said maybe. And then all of a sudden, it blew up and you said, “Damn it, I should’ve bought that.”

Jonathan Stone:

Oh yeah, easy. Don’t even know why I thought about it. Anything with Luka Doncic’s signature on, anything.

I’m a Maverick’s fan. I didn’t understand the hype at the time. I thought, no, this is crazy. There’s going to be thousands of them. The hype in Luka and where those cards have gone, I think that for me, is the biggest train I never jumped onto.

Scrappy:

Okay. For those kids that are watching, any parting advice?

Jonathan Stone:

Do what you enjoy. Don’t worry about what anybody else around you enjoys. Do what you enjoy. Invest in what you want, because no matter what eBay says your card is worth, what it’s worth to you is more important than any number on eBay.

Scrappy:

Oh, that’s great. I love that. I love that. I’m going to visit you, for sure.

Jonathan Stone:

Hey, it’ll be great. Let’s get those cameras on. Well, we’ve got a trade night coming up this Saturday. Just, we’re going to fill the store out with kids. I just can’t wait to see all these kids interact.

Scrappy:

That’s great. That’s really great. You’re doing good stuff, Jonathan. Thank you so much. We really enjoy your time.

It’s The Come Up. We’re featuring entrepreneurs. You’re just on the cusp of it. I’m excited for you. I’m really excited for you.

You’re a risk taker. You’re an innovator. You’re doing it. Southwest Florida, just up the road in Venice, Blue Breaks. Awesome.Scrappy:

What up? What up? What up? What up? What up? I’m Scrappy. This is The Come Up, featuring Southwest Florida entrepreneurs. They’re innovators, risk takers and big picture thinkers.

Today, our guest is really cool, really cool. I’m looking forward to this, ’cause I’m a baseball collector myself.

It is Jonathan from Blue Breaks in Venice Beach. He’s got a great store over there. If you want to be our next guest, make sure to check us out at Hey Scrappy on Instagram.

Blue Breaks, tell us about your store. How long you’ve been in business, Jonathan?

Jonathan Stone:

Hey, Scrappy. Well, we’ve been in business three weeks now. We opened the doors three weeks ago. We’ve been primarily online until then. But yeah, no, me, the wife and the nine month old baby decided it was time to take some risks.

We sold our home, moved to the area we’re in now. We’re actually staying with friends at the moment yet. We sold our home and put all of our money into opening a store because we just felt that there’s a space in the market for what we do.

Scrappy:

Okay. So in Venice specifically, do you have competition?

Jonathan Stone:

There’s some other stores in Venice, but I don’t think there’s competition in the sports cards well, because it’s not like McDonald’s, Wendy that all have a burger. They have the same burger.

You can go into every sports card store in the country. Every single store has different cards, has a different product. Not only that, even if they have the same product, when you open a box of sports cards, the cards inside are different in every single box.

So, no, I don’t think there is such a thing as competition in the sports card world. There’s other people that sell sports cards. There’s other people that do similar things.

It’s funny. I was talking to a customer a little while ago. As a collector, you should never only buy what you collect from one store or one person, because every person has a different card, has different types of cards, has different items that you want to collect. This is no different.

Scrappy:

You say you’re different from everybody else. What’s your niche?

Jonathan Stone:

In the store, as well as obviously selling sports cards, we have single sports cards from one penny. So, you can come in the store right now, and we have 30,000 cards that are a penny each, for sale in store right now.

As well as that, we have trade nights. We also do birthday parties for the kids as well.

Scrappy:

Oh, that’s fun. That’s fun. So you’ve been in business for only three weeks. Where do you get all your inventory?

Jonathan Stone:

We do a lot of shopping online. We have distributors. We have contacts within Panini and Topps and things like that as well, that we utilize.

We get as much as we can, from as many different sources, so that our customers come in and have a great weekend.

Scrappy:

Interesting. Interesting. As an entrepreneur, you’re staying at your friend’s house, you’ve put all your money into this. It’s a leap of faith.

Is it something you’re really passionate about or something you see as a business opportunity or both?

Jonathan Stone:

I’ve worked in sport my entire life. I spent 10 years as a tennis umpire. I worked tennis matches at the very top level. I’ve worked Wimbledon. I’ve worked tournaments all over the world. Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal.

I’ve also worked soccer professionally, in multiple countries. And I’ve actually spent two years in baseball. I worked in Independent Professional Baseball league last year. I also do call-up games for the minor leagues.

So as well as that, to me as a collector of sports cards, it’s about filling a gap in the market, where other collectors can actually get their hands on the products they want from somebody who cares.

Scrappy:

Okay. Does your wife think you’re crazy for doing this?

Jonathan Stone:

My wife thought I was crazy before this. This just puts the nail in the coffin. I was crazy long before this.

Scrappy:

Jonathan, I’ve bought cards on eBay. I’ve gone to trade shows. I’ve been to shops. Why should I go to a shop versus eBay or a trade show?

Jonathan Stone:

Because you can come in store. You can handle our cards. You can look at it. You can get the advice you need.

We do products where you can clean your cards in store. We also do products where you can store your cards in the best condition.

Not only that, we submit to graders. We submit cards to PSA. You can actually have a good time in here.

We’ve had a lot of people in here at the weekend. We had people watching the England versus Germany European Soccer final game.

We had people in here buying supplies. We had kids in here. We had a David Becker autographed card come out of a box. We had a Steph Curry card come out of the box.

Scrappy:

Oh, wow. Wow.

Jonathan Stone:

We had a Juan DeFranco card come out of a box yesterday as well. So, we’ve had lots of cards come out over the last few days. You don’t get those experiences anywhere else because at home, you’re on your own. You’re opening cards.

If you go to a show, you’re probably buying the cards. You don’t want to open them at the show ’cause you want them to be protected.

But here you can come in, grab the cards, and we’ll give you the protection you need, so that your cards go home in the same condition they come out of that box in.

Scrappy:

The experience, for sure. That’s really interesting. That’s definitely a differential advantage.

Now, you mentioned kids. What percentage of your customers, at least in the first three weeks, are children versus some avid hardcore collector?

Jonathan Stone:

We have, obviously adults that are regaining their childhood through this. We also have collectors that come in with their kids as well.

It’s funny. A little while ago I had the gentleman come in. Him and his daughter actually collect. They’ve been a great inspiration for me and my wife, because to see them bonding over collecting cards, a guy who did this when he was a child and now his almost teenage daughter, getting into it, coming in and raiding up any boxes for her is just, it’s just an amazing thing, watching them bond.

So I think you’re probably looking at a 50/50 split because most of the kids bring their parents with them.

We do mimosas on a Sunday for the baseball moms, just to keep them happy as well. So, we have a few adults come in, but we do have a lot of kids.

Scrappy:

Are you a sucker for a kid with a smile, that wants a good deal?

Jonathan Stone:

When you have a nine month old baby, you’re a sucker for any kid with a smile. Sucker for any kid with a smile.

Scrappy:

How do you make the transition from being an umpire and a referee and being a sports advocate in that regard, to actually selling your wares, from a baseball card perspective?

Jonathan Stone:

It’s been an interesting transition. This time of year, I’m used to… Normally, I’m away in the summer on a baseball field. It’s been hard this year, being at home. But I think life has changed for me.

Now having our Kalimar baby, it’s giving him something that when he’s two, three, four, five, his interest will pique. He can help out in the shop. It keeps him busy.

But not only that. It’s a family business, that hopefully he’ll carry on in years to come.

Scrappy:

That’s awesome. I can tell just by your personality that you’re breeding something special over there, Jonathan. I can totally feel that.

You mentioned graded. Now, it’s really frustrating to me as a baseball card collector, that I got to send out graded cards. Can you explain the process to our audience?

Jonathan Stone:

Cards are worth different value, depending on their condition. In a sense, in the grading world, you’re grading your card from one to 10, 10 being the best, one being the worst.

Each of those grades, depending on the company and the grade you get, are worth a different value.

So just because it comes fresh out of the box does not mean it’s a 10 out 10 perfect condition card. Errors happen in printing, so it might be slightly off center.

We’ve all had those days where we’re fed up with that little bit of black ink crossing through a couple of letters on the printer. That happens in the card world. So, all of those sort of things affect it.

You can come to us. We’ll clean the card for you. We will send it off to PSA, and then that card comes back with a grade on it.

A grade is no better than a referee or an umpire. It’s just one person you’re, paying to give you an independent opinion on that card.

Scrappy:

How much does it cost?

Jonathan Stone:

It varies from $18 into the hundreds, depending on the value of your card. The annoying thing with grading and it annoys me as a store and as a collector, is the grading cost is dependent upon the value of the card.

So if you turn around and bring in a card that’s worth 30, $40, you might get away with an 18 to $23 charge to have that graded.

But if it’s worth 50, 60, $70,000, then we’re going to start talking thousands of dollars for the exact same process. That’s where it’s frustrating as a collector.

But we have to remember, when all these cards are being handed around and they do have these high values, there’s things like, insurance has to be taken into consideration, because that company is assuming the risk and liability of damaging that card that’s worth thousands of dollars.

Scrappy:

For sure. For sure. I have a 1980 Topps baseball card set. Ricky Henderson’s in there as a rookie. What are the chances that if I get it graded, it’s going to come out spectacular and make me a couple dollars?

Jonathan Stone:

I think there’s a chance with any card, it comes out spectacular. It’s going to depend on how you’ve kept it over the years, making sure it’s in as good a condition as possible.

Not only that, the value of cards changes all the time. David Ortiz got entered into the Hall of Fame this week. The value of his cards will change, based on that.

Players that get called up from the minor leagues into the majors, their card value will change on that.

Touch wood it never happens, when players pass away, their value changes on those cards again. To get the maximum revenue out of your card, if you’re wanting to sell it, is about doing it at the right time.

Scrappy:

Jonathan, it’s so frustrating, because I have probably a hundred cards that I look at, that have so much potential. A nice Pete Rose, a Yaz. I got a 1961 Yaz rookie card. I have all these different cards, but it would cost a fortune for me to be grading them.

Jonathan Stone:

Oh, a hundred percent. I feel your pain. We have about 65,000 cards on the shop floor right now, that if I could only afford to do that, I would.

A lot of collectors want their card in the original condition. They don’t necessarily want it graded.

We talk about when you’re watching again, the baseball purist. There is still plenty of baseball purists out in the card collector world that want it in that original condition.

So, there is pluses and minuses with grading. It’s not always the best idea to throw your money at grading. Sometimes, you know what? It’s best you just love what we have.

Scrappy:

Okay. I have my 1961 Yaz rookie card. It’s in plastic. I’ve kept really good care of it. My dad gave it to me as a gift a long time ago. I still have it. Is it better for me to go on eBay and try to sell it or bring it to your store?

Jonathan Stone:

As a generalization, going on eBay, you’re probably going to get the market value for that card. But don’t forget, you’re going to have a 13% fee, which will be a charge from eBay for selling with them.

So let’s say a card sells for a thousand dollars. You’re going to lose 130 straight away. So, now we’re down to 870. All right?

So you come to me. I’m probably going to offer you 750, $800 for that card. So you’re going to say, “Well, why would I sell to you instead of eBay?”

Remember, when that person gets that card, if they don’t like it, they can return it, and you’ve got to return that money.

When it comes to me, that’s money in your hand. You’re good to go. Let me deal with the problem. Let me deal with the customers because just like anything else, if you mail it out and it gets damaged in the mail, you’ve got to deal with USPS, when it comes to insurance and things like that. I can deal with all of those problems for you.

Scrappy:

I think it’s fascinating that you can just reel off 750, 800, off the top of your head, based on a year and a player and a team. That’s amazing to me.

So in that regard too, then you know how much you can get out of it, selling it to somebody else. So that’s all in your head?

Jonathan Stone:

A hundred percent. So when customers come in to sell to us, one of the things that we believe makes us different from some of the competition is, we will give you a price that we believe is fair.

But not only that, I’m going to tell you the price sticker that I’m going to put on that product on my shelf.

So if I come in and think that card’s worth a hundred dollars, I’m going to tell you straight up, “I’m going to sell this card in store for a hundred dollars.” I will offer you $70 in cash and $85 in store credit, which you can use in the store.

But by being transparent, you know that when you come in, in two, three, four weeks time, you see the price. Oh, you know what? He’s done exactly what he said he’s going to do. So, perhaps this is the guy we can trust.

Rather than you look at the stores all over the country. If you go and sell a card to a store and they give you 50 bucks, and you go in three weeks later and you see your card for $400, is that a store you’re going to keep going back to?

Scrappy:

Right. Right. That’s so smart. That’s really smart. If I get that transparency from a company or a card shop, it’s going to definitely make me want to go there on a regular basis.

That’s really, really smart because we have an attitude as baseball card collectors and avid fans, that we’re going to get screwed over, unfortunately.

Jonathan Stone:

Yeah. I think for me, a lot of stores, all up and down the country, when they go from being… They’re run by collectors. Everybody that opens a card store is generally a collector. We have an interest in this.

But when they start transitioning from that to just a store owner that wants to make money, then we lose the concept of why we opened.

But no, I’m a collector. I know what my card is worth. If I know my card sells on eBay for a hundred dollars or $200, and this person in front of me is offering me 30 or 40, why would I carry on doing business?

I know that the card I’m buying from them, they’re making way too much money on. So look, let’s be transparent. I’ll tell you what I’m going to price it out for in store. I’ll tell you what I think it’s worth, but I’m going to also offer you what I think is a fair price.

If you think it’s fair, you take it. If you don’t and you want to go to eBay, there’s zero hard feelings about that. I think we need to be aware of that, as dealers.

Scrappy:

You mentioned earlier, boxes. Is it better to keep a box intact or to cherry pick out six cards that are valuable?

Jonathan Stone:

No. I think, let’s look at 1986 Fleer basketball, the Michael Jordan rookie cards. The individual packs out of those, I think I saw on eBay, some were selling for $1,500 a pack.

Scrappy:

Wow.

Jonathan Stone:

There’s 40 packs in a box. So, we’re talking $60,000 in a box. That doesn’t happen with every product. The product value’s dependent on the rookie class or the class that’s in that product, each and every year.

But generally, do you know what? Buying some boxes and keeping a hold of them, it’s rare a box will ever go down in value.

Scrappy:

Everybody wants the rookie card. That’s for sure.

Jonathan Stone:

Oh, yeah.

Scrappy:

Kyle Trask, the football player, the quarterback for the Florida Gators, I’m a Florida Gator, I bought a bunch of his cards on speculation.

Of course, I bought Kyle Pitts. I bought a bunch of Kyle Pitts. I bought like 20 rookie cards from him. I don’t really know what I’m doing.

I buy these cards randomly. And then all of a sudden, my friend who knows baseball cards better than me says, “Well, these are still not worth anything because they’re not autographed. They’re not the high end brand.”

When we want to get a rookie card on speculation, somebody in college, that’s going into the pros the following year, how do we buy?

Jonathan Stone:

Let’s all remember one thing. Tom Brady was picked in what, the seventh round? Those were cards at the time, that me and you could’ve probably bought on the equivalent of eBay back then, for 99 cents.

That’s not now. You’ve got to collect who you want to collect, who you enjoy and who you love.

For me every year, I’ll look at a product Bowman draft in baseball. I’ll pick some two or three random names that went maybe in the fifth, sixth, seventh round. I’ll pick two or three. I’ll invest heavily in those cards at 25 cents, 50 cents, a dollar and buy as many of those as I can. The cheaper you buy a card, the less money you are going to lose. It’s like shares.

Scrappy:

Sure. Sure.

Jonathan Stone:

So if I buy a hundred of these cards for 25 cents a piece, the most I’m ever going to lose is $25. But if that player makes it makes his debut in major leagues, the moment he’s called up, that’s when you start to sell.

They’re probably going to be 50, 60, $70 at the time, and then you’ve invested. Then you’re looking at that return of money that you can use to grow and enhance your own personal collection, where you want that one holy grail card that we’re all chasing.

Scrappy:

Have you ever experienced the holy grail card?

Jonathan Stone:

No. No. There’s definitely a few cards in the store, that I wished were… that are on… I’m looking at a couple right now, that are in the cabinets, that I’m wishing was sitting at home and not here.

I think I had a kid come in the other day, who wanted a Mac Jones autograph. We have a Mac Jones card on sale in the store. It’s 500 bucks. He’s like, “I just can’t afford it.”

He was 10, 11 years old. “I have $109 in my savings account,” but this is a lower level product, Leaf. There was a Mac Jones autograph on my shelf for $125.

He was 11 years old. He came back the next day. He gave me the $109. 38 cents that he had. He took his card.

I lost money on that deal. All ends up going back to the kid with the smile. I lost money. But the smile on that kid when he ran across my store and showed his mom, it’s every penny of losing $10.

Scrappy:

You got a customer for life.

Jonathan Stone:

Oh, but isn’t that the thing? Isn’t that thing that we’re all forgetting? Today’s low level customers are tomorrow’s medium level customers and the next day’s big level customers.

Making an impression on kids today… We have a penny section. I don’t charge kids for cards out of the penny section. You come in. You spend an hour. You find 50 cards. You’re 12 years old. I’m not taking 50 cents from you. Do you know what? Have a great day.

But when they come back the next year and buy some 25-cent cards, when they get their collection better, just seeing them grow with their collection, isn’t that what this is about?

I’m here to pay my bills. Look, Let’s look at the business aspect of this. I’m here to pay my bills, but I’m not here to buy a Ferrari. I’m here to give my nine month old baby a future.

By watching other kids slightly older than him, grow up and build their future, and isn’t that aiding my baby’s future as well?

Scrappy:

That’s awesome. That’s awesome.

Jonathan Stone:

The baby comes in store. It’s me and the wife and the baby. I have customers that pick him up. I have kids that interact with him. My nine month old baby’s making memories for other people. Do you know what? That’s it for me. That’s worth more than anything else.

Scrappy:

Your biggest regret, you must have one that you looked at and you said maybe. And then all of a sudden, it blew up and you said, “Damn it, I should’ve bought that.”

Jonathan Stone:

Oh yeah, easy. Don’t even know why I thought about it. Anything with Luka Doncic’s signature on, anything.

I’m a Maverick’s fan. I didn’t understand the hype at the time. I thought, no, this is crazy. There’s going to be thousands of them. The hype in Luka and where those cards have gone, I think that for me, is the biggest train I never jumped onto.

Scrappy:

Okay. For those kids that are watching, any parting advice?

Jonathan Stone:

Do what you enjoy. Don’t worry about what anybody else around you enjoys. Do what you enjoy. Invest in what you want, because no matter what eBay says your card is worth, what it’s worth to you is more important than any number on eBay.

Scrappy:

Oh, that’s great. I love that. I love that. I’m going to visit you, for sure.

Jonathan Stone:

Hey, it’ll be great. Let’s get those cameras on. Well, we’ve got a trade night coming up this Saturday. Just, we’re going to fill the store out with kids. I just can’t wait to see all these kids interact.

Scrappy:

That’s great. That’s really great. You’re doing good stuff, Jonathan. Thank you so much. We really enjoy your time.

It’s The Come Up. We’re featuring entrepreneurs. You’re just on the cusp of it. I’m excited for you. I’m really excited for you.

You’re a risk taker. You’re an innovator. You’re doing it. Southwest Florida, just up the road in Venice, Blue Breaks. Awesome.

Content with Teeth is a content creator service with over 20 years of experience

Content Creator Service

Good content creation on your website gives your customers the information they need and helps increase your ranking on search engines. Here at Content with Teeth, we specialize in web content creation to help you rank higher in the Search Engine Results Pages or SERPs. Our content creator service aims to develop educational and entertaining content that provides value and engages your audience.

We’ll start by collaborating with you to understand your brand, audience and industry. Once we know that, we’ll create engaging, unique and on-brand content.

Content That We Create

At Content with Teeth, we offer different types of content creation services. Some of the types of content we can create include:

Landing Page Copy 

Landing pages play a vital role in engaging your customer. Here at Content with Teeth, we know what it takes for an audience to engage, get drawn into your copy and continue scrolling through your website. We can boost exposure to your products or services by creating SEO-optimized landing pages.

White Paper Services 

White papers are the standard of sales content. They need to provide value for your audience to be effective. Whether you’re looking to get five pages or fifty pages, we create engaging copy for sales enablement.

Copywriting Services 

Our writers can write compelling copy for your social media posts, video descriptions, paid ads and anywhere you need solid copy to boost sales. We know what works for your business—and what doesn’t. We can help you write compelling content to guide future growth.

Blog Writing Services 

Building a quality blog for your website takes time. We can serve as your company content writer. We can help you create a content library that captivates your prospective audience and help you build a solid reputation as a thought leader in your industry.

Press Releases

A press release puts your business in the spotlight. It boosts your brand recognition and helps you generate quality traffic to your website. We can create an effective press release that tells your story and engage your audience.

Newsletters

If your company needs a daily, weekly, or monthly newsletter, we can help. Our team can create creating an eye-catching and engaging newsletter. We can create an attention-grabbing newsletter that will progress your brand awareness and meet your objective.

Video Content

You’re shutting the door for many potential customers if you’re not creating video content. Video can drive more traffic to your website. Depending on your industry, we can help you create explainer videos, demo videos, how-to videos or customer testimonials.

We also create include free guides, eBooks, interactive content, case studies, email campaigns and much more.

Struggling To Write Great Content For Your Website? We Can Help

Well-written content is a must in today’s competitive online market. You need high-quality content that will appeal to customers. Here at Content with Teeth, we can produce engaging content about your business. Contact us today at 1-888-552-9235 for more information about our content creation services.

In Episode 9 of The Come Up, meet Florida Pet Adoption Specialist Gary Willoughby who answers all your pet questions

Florida Pet Adoption Does The Come Up

Should cats have claws?

Should men have cats?

Why do we hoomans bond so much with our four-legged friends?

lee county animal services

These questions and all things pets are answered by Pet Adoption Specialist Gary Willoughby, Executive Director of the Gulfcoast Humane Society, a non-profit no-kill Fort Myers animal shelter funded only by donations. The facility takes in 3,000 homeless pets a year and provides veterinary services, transitioning homeless pets into happy, loving homes.

lee county veterinary services

Gary is Scrappy’s guest on Episode 9 of The Come Up, Content with Teeth’s video podcast chronicling dynamic entrepreneurs in SWFL from Naples to Sarasota.

Episode 9: SWFL Pet Adoption Highlights

fort myers animal services and pet adoption

Da’ Big Snip: Gary mentions a whopping percentage of SWFL dogs that are not spayed or neutered. The number will blow your mind. Gary’s animal services shelter performs almost 9000 operations on adoptable dogs annually to remedy this problem.

The Big Chill: Scrappy describes what is the best spot to de-stress in Lee County, one that is open some nights and weekends too. Learn what it is and why it’s better than a yoga studio or bar.

florida animal rescue

Pre-Historic Pets: Find out more about early humanity’s spiritual connection with their pets. Gary describes how early humans bonded with and domesticated wild animals nearly 12,000 years ago. This bond continues and is fostered by animal shelters where SWFL residents can adopt dogs and other animals.

florida animal shelter

Get Your Animal Questions Answered: Is it cruel to de-claw a cat? How do you train a puppy? Gary answers all your pressing animal questions. His answers on homeless pets might surprise you.

Florida cat rescue

Catch other key nuggets in Episode 9 of The Come Up like how dogs help autistic children and how distinctive personalities emerge in a litter of lovable puppies. This episode is so much more than divulging a rescue spot to adopt dogs and cats.

About Gary Willoughby & Content with Teeth

For UnBoring Content like The Come Up, contact Content with Teeth HERE. Find out more about Gary Willoughby and the Gulfcoast Humane Society HERE.

The Come Up Episode 9 Video Transcript

Scrappy:

What up? What up? What up? What up? What up? I’m Scrap Jackson. Welcome to The Come Up. It’s a video podcast, celebrating Southwest Florida’s most interesting entrepreneurs and executives. We’re brought to you by Content with Teeth, a creative content marketing agency right here in Southwest Florida. They do it really big like this Fathead behind me. If you want to be a guest, reach out to me at @HeyScrappy on Instagram, or text Content with Teeth at 21000. That’s Content with Teeth.

Our guest today is Gary Willoughby, Executive Director of the Gulf Coast Humane Society. It’s a non-profit organization in Fort Myers, which is a no-kill animal shelter funded only by donations. They take in 3,000 homeless animals a year, provide veterinarian care, and transition rescued animals into happy, loving homes. Gary, welcome.

Gary Willoughby:

Thank you so much for inviting me.

Scrappy:

Yeah, it’s great to have you here. Let’s start with the hard facts. 80% of dogs in Southwest Florida are not spayed or neutered.

Gary Willoughby:

That sounds about right and we’re doing our best to try to remedy. We do almost 9,000 spay/neuter surgeries every year in our clinic.

Scrappy:

What do you profess to people out there that are being irresponsible with this?

Gary Willoughby:

Well, again, if they only have one pet, they may think it’s not necessary because their dog or cat’s not going to get out, or their cat’s not going to get pregnant, but animals get loose all the time. It’s something that we strongly recommend. There’s too many pets ending up in shelters in one of the best remedies is spay and neuter.

Scrappy:

I have interesting story for you. I worked on Palm Beach Boulevard and my work was stressed. I love what I did, but on a stressful moment, I’d say, “You know what, I’m going to go by your facility and I’m going to pet the dogs, talk to the cats, and just relax for 15 or 20 minutes.” It always did the trick always. Now, that afternoon, I went back happy and healthy and ready to go. Is everybody allowed just to come by and browse?

Gary Willoughby:

Oh, absolutely. You don’t have to have an appointment to come see our animals. We’re open seven days a week here, so we fit about any schedule, again, including one night, Thursday night, today, we’re open until 7:00, and then open again Saturday and Sunday, so come by. You don’t have to be even ready to adopt. You may just want to come and ask them questions. If you already have a dog at home, you want to bring your dog out to meet one of our other dogs, we also have folks that help you make sure it’s a good fit for your family.

Scrappy:

Okay. I went through this process for weeks, checking out your cats and your dogs and having a nice time with them. I finally adopted and I got Zoe, my cat. It’s very cathartic. Pets are very cathartic. Can you elaborate on that?

Gary Willoughby:

Yeah, it’s something called the human/animal bond that we’re big believers in you. Again, we think of animals as part of our family. There’s a lot of studies showing how they help with your blood pressure, giving you a reason to get out of bed in the morning. Sometimes if people are fighting depression, or they’re not feeling well in general, knowing that animal’s counting on you for care, for feeding, to take your dog for a walk, all that, it’s good for you, and obviously, it’s good for that animal that needs you.

Scrappy:

I call it a spiritual connection. I feel like that emotional bond between an owner and a pet is so profound that it’s hard to put to words.

Gary Willoughby:

Yeah, they’re 100% reliant on us. We’ve domesticated animals many thousands of years ago because they were important to us. Our ancestors knew that and we first domesticated dogs, but way back in 16,000 BC, so it’s been part of our lives for many, many, many generations, and we know that importance. That’s what we’re always advocating to keep animals in loving homes if they already are there and they need help with pet food or affordable veterinary care, or whatever, the last thing we want to do is see somebody’s family broken up by bringing their animals to us when we can help them keep it in the home.

Scrappy:

Absolutely, absolutely. Speaking about cathartic, I’ll give you a quick story. There was this kid with autism and his mom was actually going to see some dogs and check them out. She was actually going there shopping, if you will, for her nephew, but her child with autism had three dogs approach him, one, after he screamed, he screamed really loud, threw his hands up in the air. He was out of control. One dog ran, one dog approached him, and the other dog just sat there and looked at him, and it was so calm and so wonderful that he actually was trained to be a service dog. That dog to this day is helping this child with autism. I really feel like it’s something to promote is not just the camaraderie and the companion that we get from a cat or a dog, but also the wonderful effects they have on us.

Gary Willoughby:

Absolutely. There are many people that are taking advantage of emotional support animals to help them add value to their daily lives and animals like in the situation you just described often can read our body language and they pick us as adopters as often as we pick them. We may come in thinking we want one dog, and then another dog you may see really knows, “You’re my human and I want you,” and they send that signal to us and we end up adopting that dog or that cat. Again, especially folks with special needs. Not every animal’s perfect for every family, and so that’s great that you have that experience. Again, we see that. We have folks from Lark and other community organizations that come out here and spend time here and work here one day a week and the way they are around the animals is really incredible to see them come out of their shells.

Scrappy:

Is it true they take on the personality of their owner, or are they innate, and they stick that way?

Gary Willoughby:

Yeah, I think they probably stick that way. They learn habits from us. Again, if we’re couch potato, they might end up being that way as well, if we’re very active, but a lot of it is in innate in their personalities already, and that may be why we’re drawn to somebody. Usually, we see that couch potato dog with a couch potato type person, and that person that likes to jog three or four miles a day, they’re going to pick an animal that’s equally able to do that jogging alongside with them.

Scrappy:

How soon can you tell a puppy’s personality? How many weeks old?

Gary Willoughby:

I mean, I guess we see them at all ages. Oftentimes, they’re with a mom and sometimes that can be harder how big the litter is, so they’re forming their… You can tell the differences in a litter. We just recently had a momma dog of nine puppies that came here when the puppies were pretty young and it didn’t take long at all to see they were nine different personalities. Sometimes they’re also even, they look very different, lots of different colors and shapes. You don’t always know who the father is. We just saw the mama dog here, but nine distinctive personalities in these puppies.

Scrappy:

Do you have any hints as far as adopters coming to facility and looking for a puppy as far as how to pick?

Gary Willoughby:

Yeah. Shelters generally don’t get a lot of puppies. When we do, they tend to get adopted quickly. That’s where I would encourage you, like you’ve done in the past, is come and visit, talk to some of our staff that work with them every day. They can start starting off with asking new questions about what you’re looking for, your living arrangements, other people and other animals in your house, how active you want to be. Are you looking for somebody to go on car rides with you, or on your boat, or just to play around the backyard? Learning more about you and your family helps identify the type of puppy, the breed, the characteristics, the sizes, and all that would be best suited for your house.

Scrappy:

Gary, as an executive director, how did you get in this game? What motivated you to become where you are today?

Gary Willoughby:

Yeah. It wasn’t a direct path. I started off this shelter actually as a kid, I moved to Florida when I was young, and I actually adopted my first kitten from this shelter in 1979.

Scrappy:

Wow.

Gary Willoughby:

So, I go back to the organization quite a ways. Right after I graduated college, I adopted a dog from another group in St. Pete and I started volunteering for them and then I fostered and I helped at special events. Later on, I was a board member of a different shelter here in North Fort Myers at the Animal Refuge Center. After I finished grad school, I decided that I wanted to make this my not just something I did on the side, or as my hobby, or my volunteerism, I wanted to do this full-time, and so that’s what I’ve done for about the last 15 or 16 years is worked in animal welfare organizations in several different states, and was super lucky that this opportunity back in my hometown became available last year.

Scrappy:

How rewarding is it?

Gary Willoughby:

It’s an emotional rollercoaster some days because when you love animals as much as we do, you see abuse and neglect, but when you see those animals overcome that and find that great home afterwards, it recharges you. It’s really, when you see animals that come in scared and leave happy as could be and getting those updates from people who’ve adopted, it makes all the difference in the world for us.

Scrappy:

One of the biggest problems with cats is they scratch. They scratch the furniture, they scratch a very various things, so do we declaw them? Because I’ve heard a lot of bad things about declawing.

Gary Willoughby:

Yeah, I was most recently was up in New York state and we had it banned at the state level, so it’s against a law to declaw cats up there. It’s not something we would do or recommend. We understand, again, why people are concerned about nobody wants to be scratched, and especially if they have thin skin and they’re worried about bleeding or things, but at home I have lots of little scratching pads and scratching posts and you train. My cat was five when I adopted him and it took no time at all to get him used to scratching on those. My furniture’s all safe, I’m safe, I don’t have any, so they can be trained out of it in most cases. Again, our staff is happy to offer some advice to folks, because again, the veterinarian share with us how troubling of a procedure it is for the cat’s health to do that, so we strongly discourage that.

Scrappy:

Sure, sure, sure. How smart are cats?

Gary Willoughby:

I guess like people, I mean, they vary. Mine seems to be a very bright guy and they like the routine. He’s friendly. He’s very, very affectionate for 30 seconds and then he runs off and does something else. My cat’s pretty smart and I think most of them are. They’re more trainable than I think people know, too. Some people leash-walk their cats, some train them to walk through a cat door to go to the porch. Again, they’re usually pretty bright creatures. Again, they’re very different personalities than dogs, but again, I have both at home, and love them both equally.

Scrappy:

Okay. You have a dog and a cat. Are you inclined to take all of them home at the end of the day?

Gary Willoughby:

I’ve been guilty of that in the past where I’ve had four dogs and three cats, plus fostering animals, and I wasn’t even the worst example in my place of work. I’m better at it now. My little dog is old and diabetic and visually impaired, and so right now he’s not looking for a new buddy, so I try to be sensitive to… I do take animals on the news all the time and I fall in love with a different dog just about every day, so I really just try to celebrate when I find that right family for them and they get adopted because I know as much as I love one dog tomorrow, there’s going to be another one in this place I like just as much.

Scrappy:

Sure, sure, sure. You have a cat, I have a cat, so we’re guys that have cats, but in some respects, I still hear that it’s not cool for a guy to have a cat. Sometimes I mention to people at work, “Yeah, I’ve got a cat and I’m proud of it,” and they look at me sideways. How do you respond to that?

Gary Willoughby:

Yeah. Again, to each his own, I guess. I’ve always loved cats and loved all animals. I’ve had rabbits in the past. Yeah, I don’t know why it is that guys think it’s not cool to have cats. Although again, we are fortunate. We’re around a lot of our volunteers and our staff. The guys here have cats and like them as well. Doesn’t mean you’re less of a guy because you have a cat. I think I have a really cool cat. His name is Emmett. I think he’s awesome. Even when I took him on the news, the guy interviewing me there wasn’t a big cat fan, I could tell, and that’s okay. Again, maybe that’s peer pressure, or how they’re brought up, maybe their dads didn’t like cats as well. I love them. More for me, I guess. If they don’t, I want them.

Scrappy:

Okay, okay. I have a couple of feral cats in my neighborhood. Is it dangerous to touch them?

Gary Willoughby:

Not dangerous to touch them? I mean, they’re usually more likely to run away from you, so you’re probably not going to be able to. We do a lot of TNR surgeries here at our clinic and work with a lot of groups who trap them in the communities to make sure they’re spayed or neutered. But again, they’re happy just to have some food left out for them. They don’t want to bother you. They want you far away from them. Our goal is just to make sure there’s not a lot of unplanned litters of kittens coming from those feral cats, because again, when they’re born outside, that’s a tough environment for them. Those also, if they’re not socialized at a young age, by the time they’re seven or eight weeks old, they may not be able to be socialized.

Scrappy:

Interesting, interesting.

Gary Willoughby:

So, the sooner we can get them in, and the feral cat groups we work with, when they catch them, we try to take the kittens in and foster them and socialize them so they can also be adopted inside houses, not outside.

Scrappy:

Okay. Huge general question for you. Tips on how to train your dog.

Gary Willoughby:

Hmm. Probably I would consult the professionals in that. There are a large amount of… You can do general dog training classes or puppy classes at your local PetSmart or things like that. I’ve done that in the past with animals. There are a lot of specialists depending on what your dogs, what it needs training on, so if it’s jumping a lot, if it’s training on housebreaking, on how to get along with other dogs, there’s a lot of different things. There are experts who make this profession just studying dog psychology and behavioral tendencies, because again, all dogs, just like people, are all individuals, and so their care plan needs to be tailored to their specific issues and their home environment. Sometimes the trainers will tell us as well part of it’s also training us as the dog owners that sometimes we’re part of the reason why their behavior, we may not always be reading the body language, and we might need training ourselves just as much as the dog does.

Scrappy:

Interesting. Very interesting. More specifically, how do we train a puppy to pee and poop outside

Gary Willoughby:

Crate training is what I’ve done. I haven’t had puppies often, but crate tanning, getting them into a routine. Again, if you’re were somebody who’s gone 12 hours a day, that puppy’s not going to hold it that long, so puppy pads in your crate. Even my older dogs now, every time they drink, or every time he eats, he’s going outside right afterwards, so getting him out, trying to read that body language. When the puppy’s done playing, when he is done eating, or drinking, or wakes up from a nap, he’s got to go, so getting him outside quickly and teaching him that routine and then celebrating when he does it good outside and then bringing him back inside and giving him a treat and all that, so rewarding that good behavior. They want to please us.

Scrappy:

Absolutely. Absolutely. I’ve heard mixed opinions about crating. You believe in it?

Gary Willoughby:

Yeah, I have for years and years. Again, making sure it’s a large enough crate. You don’t get one when they’re a puppy and then they can barely squeeze in there later on. You want to make sure they have room for their treats and their water and their bed. I have a dog bed in mine for my little dog. Especially if you have other pets in the home, again, some people may have a spare bedroom, or something that they use. The dogs often… I look at it, I have music on at home as well, I make sure the blinds are drawn, so it’s not too bright. Just try to have a nice… Just like we want to sleep in a comfortable environment, you want to make sure it’s comfortable for your dog.

Scrappy:

Sure.

http://contentwithteeth.com/2022/08/