Snake of the Day 04-03-16a

Show & Tell

Many who have not seen them in person have asked how the sloughed epidermis (shed skin) of a Scaleless corn differs from that of a scaled corn (scaleless version lower-right).  Bonus pic 

< style="font-size: 12.16px; line-height: 15.808px;" />

 Same two partial sheds (scaleless version lower-left).. 

Snake of the Day 04-19-16

Show & $ell

{product id=1414}

This 2015 male Extreme Okeetee corn is currently 17″ long, eating frozen/thawed pinky mice.  His father is a SCALELESS Extreme Okeetee so this gem is het for Scaleless. His $250.00 USD price includes     

Snake of the Day 04-20-16

Show & $ell

This 2015 female Tessera corn is currently 19″ long, eating large frozen/thawed pinky mice.  The ID label fell of her cage, so I cannot cite what hets she might possess.  Her $155.00 USD price includes      

Snake of the Day 04-21-16

Show & Tell

No reason to pose a high-white Reverse Okeetee with one of the new SMR red-modifying Amel mutants, except perhaps for contrast.  If this red Amel exhibits this much red at sub-two-year-old size, I’m excited at the prospect of extreme red at maturity. 

Snake of the Day 04-06-16

Show & $ell

This 2015 female Coral Ghost is now 19″ long, eating frozen/thawed pinky mice.   Like all Coral-type Ghosts, her colors will greatly saturate with maturity.  Her $165.00 USD price includes      

Snake of the Day 04-08-16

Show & Tell

A macro shot of Chip Bridges’ amazing Scaleless corn that he hatched in 2014.  We believe you’re now looking at a Scaleless Lavender corn snake (classic namesake lavender coloration not demonstrated because our visual perception of that color is stimulated by iridophores that reside in the outer epidermal layers–which are missing because of the absence of MOST OF that dermal layer in Scaleless serpents). 

Note the irregular scale shapes–and consequent adjacent mismatching of marginal mouth scales–can cause a minor problem in Scaleless corn mutants.  We recommend frequent evaluation of the mouth areas so particulate substrate (like the strand aspen seen at the lip junction here) can be manually removed with forceps/tweezers upon discovery.

Reminder before-and-after pic of this snake from when it hatched to a few short weeks post-partum maturity. Bonus reminder pic