Show & $ell
{product id=1060}

This 2013 female Amel Tessera corn is now 30″ long, eating frozen/thawed hopper mice. Her $385.00 price includes
Show & $ell
{product id=1060}

This 2013 female Amel Tessera corn is now 30″ long, eating frozen/thawed hopper mice. Her $385.00 price includes
Show & $ell
{product id=1059}

This 2013 male Coral Snow Motley corn is now 32″ long, eating frozen/thawed hopper mice. His $365.00 price includes
Show & $ell
{product id=1058}

This 2014 male Lava Tessera is now 22″ long, eating frozen/thawed pinky mice. His $325.00 price includes
Show & Tell

Produced by Marsha Matthews (poppycorns.com) this beautiful Opal Motley has a Coral-type Snow parent. Next year, I will breed him to some adult hets I have with the same genes.
Show & Tell

A 2014 Red Factor (RF) Amel. This one is only 16″ long, so imagine how much redder it will be at maturity? Photographed on U.S. one-dollar bill for color reference. This is one of the “morphs” I really wanted to name CHERRY corn, but refrained until more is known about the gene mutation that causes such exaggerated red.
Show & Tell

Adult Scaleless Hypo A & Sunkissed Corn. We will have 2015 hatchling Scaleless corns for sale in July. Bonus Pic
Show & Tell

A common color scheme for an Amel that is Het for Cinder.
Show & Tell

One of our Charcoal Terrazzos from original Boyd-line Terrazzo stock. This one could be a Pewter Terrazzo since that was the grandparents of this snake (Boyd Terrazzo X Pewter) but since there are no dependable markers to distinguish a Charcoal Terrazzo from a Pewter Terrazzo, until this one is bred to a Pewter, we’ll never know for sure.
Show & $OLD
{product id=1056}

This 2013 male Key Bloodred corn is now 37″ long, eating frozen/thawed small adult mice. He is from our Key p/s Bloodred corn project which we believe to potentially possess a pied-sided mutation that is not the same as typical P/S Bloodreds in the hobby? His $395.00 price includes
Show & $ell
{product id=1055}

This 2012 Mystery Lavender female corn is now 39″ long, eating frozen/thawed adult mice. She is so-called “mystery” by Rich Hume who believes this line of Lavenders to be something more than just Lavender, but breeding trials thus far have not yet identified “what” more they could be? We confess they do have some color peculiarities, and it’s been my experience that if some corn doesn’t neatly fit neatly into a model, it likely IS something different. Her $285.00 price includes