do you think a collection of sand from the most beautiful beaches of Costa Rica would be a good product to sel
they would be arranged in little bottles & named on the outside of which beach they came from. would an american, canadian, european or just about anybody like that kind of thing? and how much could it be worth?
Public Comments
- who the fuck would buy sand?
- not much... only if the bottles were really nice
- uhhhhhhh........ nobody wants sand.
- that's very bad for the environment and Costa Rica does not have pretty sand. It's gray and muddy. I don;t think taking things from nature and selling them is a good idea AT ALL.
- No, and what happens when you run out of sand?
- No.
- No one would buy that. It is the scenery from the beach that is beautiful, not the sand, For all they know you just got sand at the local beach and labeled it like it was from some exotic place.
- Not really, unless you sold it for fifty cents in a tourist shop right down on the beach. That is the kind of thing people grab quick to take back with them for cute gifts for their workmates and such when they are back from vacation. Not really going to sell otherwise.
- I have no idea if anyone would purchase this. Collections of sand from various places in the world are one persons memorabilia, their own personal keepsakes. I imagine that they would want to pick it up and collect it themselves, not buy it. Although I could be wrong, as I've seen people buy driftwood and seashells, sand might be something that interests a few. Perhaps they would buy it and have a collection, even if they had never been to those beaches! Pretending they had been.
- i have sand and seashells from many beaches all over Europe from when i visited, but i don't think anyone would find any value in it other than my own sentimental value in it. so maybe sand isn't such a great idea and if the box gets torn open it's just a mess.
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