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2013 Sunkissed Anery Corn Snake. Not much more to say about this gem produced by Tara Smith from the male below (Nigel) which was produced by P.J. Coombs. Thanks, girls. You two sure can cook. :- ) . . .
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2013 Sunkissed Anery Corn Snake. Not much more to say about this gem produced by Tara Smith from the male below (Nigel) which was produced by P.J. Coombs. Thanks, girls. You two sure can cook. :- ) . . .
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Adult female Banded Fluorescent Corn Snake. Who would ever have imagined even ten years ago that a variant of a single gene mutation (Amel) could be so beautiful and market-popular with all the different competition multi-gene mutants in the hobby? I’m now trying to envision this color scheme in a Tessera.

Two handsome 2013 hatchling Tesseras. The darker one is a Bloodred Tessera and the other is a Lava Tessera. Imagine a Tessera with both mutations??

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Young adult Charcoal Terrazzo Corn Snake. Fortunately, we used one of the original Terrazzos (formerly called Granite) that had very little striping when we crossed the grandparents of this snake (Pewter X Terrazzo). Therefore, very little pattern is exhibited in most of our Charcoal Terrazzos. . . .
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Young adult Lava Terrazzo Corn Snake in a sloppy shed.
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This 2014 male Striped Tessera, Het Pewter Motley is now 14″ long, eating frozen/thawed pinky mice. His $195.00 usd price includes
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2014 Coral (Salmon) Ghost Corn. Of course, like Coral Snow-types, this one will have two to four times as much pink color saturation when it’s an adult.
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2013 Okeetee sibling of Extreme Reverse (Amel) Okeetee corns. This corn has NO Tessera mutant ancestry, despite its amazing color saturation. Also, Photoshop did NOT contribute to this snake’s oddly rich coloration.
NOTICE:
The SSL message some of you saw this morning indicating that our SSL (Secure Site License) expired was erroneous. Well, technically it DID expire and SMR was therefore did not have the super encryption we provide for a few hours, but only because I forgot to have my webmaster, Drew Lambeth, reset his server after I paid for renewal two weeks ago. Therefore, our site is still encrypted and safe for navigation and purchases. No data on our web site was in danger, evidenced by the millions of world-wide web sites visited daily not even having added encryption security at all. SSL is mainly a protection for you when transferring your payment data to us, but no purchases were made during the few hours of this lapse of SSL update.
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Like some Pewter Motley Corn Snakes, this one barely exhibits her Motley pattern.