Snow Tessera 11-28-15b

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This 21″ long 2014 male Snow Tessera corn snake is currently eating frozen/thawed large pinky or small fuzzy mice.  His $225.00 price includes     

Tessera 11-29-15b

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{product id=1297}

This 28″  2014 male Tessera corn snake is currently eating frozen/thawed large fuzzy or small hopper mice.  His $220.00 price includes     

Amel Tessera 12-13-15

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This 2014 female Amel Tessera Corn Snake is currently 22″ long, eating frozen/thawed large pinky mice. Her father is a Sunglow Motley so she is het for the mutations, Motley and Red Factor.  Her $235.00 USD price includes shipping  

Honduran 11-30-15b

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{product id=1298}

This 25″  2014 female Hypo Honduran Milksnake is currently eating frozen/thawed large pinky or small fuzzy mice.  Her $165.00 price includes     

Okeetee 12-14-15

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This 2014 female Okeetee Corn Snake is currently 31″ long, eating frozen/thawed hopper mice.  I’m not certain exactly what she is since her parents were Buf X Buckskin Okeetee (I won’t be doing that cross again since I can’t decide if this snake is Buf or not).   Her $225.00 USD price includes shipping  

Tessera 12-02-15b

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This 22″  2014 female Tessera is currently eating frozen/thawed fuzzy mice.  She is het for Lava, so if you own a male Lava, breeding this female to him will render some Lava Tesseras.  Her $195.00 price includes     2015 hatchlings start at $80.00 plus shipping.  

Sunrise Amel 0508c

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This adult male Sunrise Amel corn is now 35″ long, eating frozen/thawed small adult mice. Obviously, the value of Sunrise Amel double mutants isn’t their Sunglow-like coloration but how they will impact other mutant compounds via the blending of the Sunrise mutation with other mutations?  His $195.00 USD price includes   S O L D

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A newly hatched Sunrise Amel Tessera demonstrating a phenotype similar to a Snow, but with the slightest blush of orange. 

 

Shown here–at just a few weeks of age–Sunrise Amel (below) and Sunrise Amel Tessera (above) in their neonatal colors just prior to the beginning of extreme orange color saturation that intensifies through maturity.  Hence, the name SUNRISE–as looking similar to pale Amels or Snows with a blush of orange, but slowly transforming to deeply red/orange adults through maturation, not unlike the transition from sunrise to full DAYlight.