Snake of the Day 05-18-13
The Snake-of-the-Day headliner of this web site features photographs that we believe will interest our web site visitors. Each daily photograph will be posted at 11:00 am. central (GMT – 5) and replaced in 24 hours. Feel free to make suggestions regarding what snake photographs you would like to see in this daily feature. The animals pictured here are not for sale, unless otherwise noted, but you can find available surplus snakes for sale on the Surplus Page of this web site. We appreciate your your patronage and welcome any suggestions you may have.
This female Ultramel is perhaps one of the most poignant examples in the contraversial debate over the origin of this mutation. Her markings are precisely like all of the original F1 out-crosses of Corn Snake to Gray Rat Snake I have ever seen. All Ultra-type mutants (including Ultramels) are hybrids of those two species. Though I have NEVER heard of anyone crossing those two species since the introduction of the Ultra Mutation into corn snake herpetoculture (except to challenge the declaration of the originator that he did indeed use those two species to make Ultra-type Corns), this one is a good example of the phenotype for F1 Gray Rat/Corn out-crosses. That said, I’m honored to have her for many reasons. She is beautiful, large, friendly, and VERY fertile. Here, she shows off her 32-egg clutch on May 17th, with no slugs. Ordinarily we do not over-moisten moss for the nest box (evidenced here by its dark coloration), but I was out of town for two DAYs when she was due to lay, and when that happens I always over-hydrate moss so that if they lay the eggs on the 1st DAY of my absence, there is less likelihood of the eggs dehydrating before I can set them up.
Note her “necklace” of eggs in the right-hand vertical egg shot – denoting the lower group of eggs in the mother-&-clutch shot. Perhaps one in 20 of my female corns lay eggs in connected strings like this. Had this string not been broken, the eggs would probably have been massed in one pile. Thank you, John Finsterwald (Zorro) for this awesome corn. Her brood will consist of Ultramels Charcoals, Blizzards, and more. BTW, I’m positive that John F. has never crossed Gray Rat Snakes with Corn Snakes so this beautiful specimen just happens to show more throwbacck Rat Snake than Corn Snake features. In other words, her parents were likely of lineage much closer to the original hybrid pairing than most of them in the hobby toDAY. Most Ultramels have been out-bred to pure corns enough generations to render more classical corn snake features. The Ratsnake markings of this one render this Ultramel the exception to most of them in the hobby toDAY.
The Snake-of-the-Day headliner of this web site features photographs that we believe will interest our web site visitors. Each daily photograph will be posted at 11:00 am. central (GMT – 5) and replaced in 24 hours. Feel free to make suggestions regarding what snake photographs you would like to see in this daily feature. The animals pictured here are not for sale, unless otherwise noted, but you can find available surplus snakes for sale on the Surplus Page of this web site. We appreciate your patronage and welcome any suggestions you may have.
Those close to me know that my favorite corn snake morph was always the Reverse Okeetee, now eclipsed only by the High White Reverse Okeetee. It is unbelievably difficult to achieve clean, crisp, and white ground color zones through clever selective breeding, and good ones like this are still uncommon in the hobby. This female didn’t lay very many eggs for her first-ever clutch, but next year she will make up for it. If she is a ten on the 1-10 scale, her husband is a strong nine, so their kids should be eye-popping. We expect to have some of these beautiful corns available for sale in mid-July, but more will be shippable in mid-August.
The Snake-of-the-Day headliner of this web site features photographs that we believe will interest our web site visitors. Each daily photograph will be posted at 11:00 am. central (GMT – 5) and replaced in 24 hours. Feel free to make suggestions regarding what snake photographs you would like to see in this daily feature. The animals pictured here are not for sale, unless otherwise noted, but you can find available surplus snakes for sale on the Surplus Page of this web site. We appreciate your patronage and welcome any suggestions you may have.
Most of our Miami Okeetees have great red markings – like this pair. The female in this “marriage” pic must have been a little camera shy by doing the Ostrich thing the minute I got the camera. Perhaps she doesn’t want her family and friends to recognize her if they happen across my werb site? We expect to have some of these beautiful corns available for sale in mid-July. Some of our Miami Okeetees resemble milk snakes, and I’ve had a few that were close to the color and pattern scheme of Gray-Banded King Snakes (Lampropeltis alterna). BTW, I love the red rabbit caricature on the male.
The Snake-of-the-Day headliner of this web site features photographs that we believe will interest our web site visitors. Each daily photograph will be posted at 11:00 am. central (GMT – 5) and replaced in 24 hours. Feel free to make suggestions regarding what snake photographs you would like to see in this daily feature. The animals pictured here are not for sale, unless otherwise noted, but you can find available surplus snakes for sale on the Surplus Page of this web site. We appreciate your patronage and welcome any suggestions you may have.

Special thanks to Terri Bieknowski for producing these stunning Lavender Tesseras. The pale one is almost certainly a Hypomelanistic (aka: Hypo) Lavender Tessera, but I won’t know for sure until breeding trials are performed. It’s difficult to see trace outlines of pattern in the sloughed epidermal skins of some Lavender mutants (evidence of melanin in the outermost dermal layers) so with some Lavender types, we never really know if they are also Hypo mutants or polygenetically pale variants. Most of us will agree that it does not matter. Hopefully, we will have enough of these beauties this summer to list them on our web site.
The Snake-of-the-Day headliner of this web site features photographs that we believe will interest our web site visitors. Each daily photograph will be posted at 11:00 am. central (GMT – 5) and replaced in 24 hours. Feel free to make suggestions regarding what snake photographs you would like to see in this daily feature. The animals pictured here are not for sale, unless otherwise noted, but you can find available surplus snakes for sale on the Surplus Page of this web site. We appreciate your patronage and welcome any suggestions you may have.

The primary reason I photograph conjugal events is for positive identification of the sire. I don’t photograph them in large boxes because sometimes they copulate stretched out across the length of the cage and I can’t get a tight shot. I put several pairs together and then, flit around like a bee in the garden – going from cage to cage – monitoring progress. When I encounter a pair that is breeding, I take the picture to verify who bred whom. In this case, as soon as I put them together I was called away to the phone and forgot about them. When I can’t at least get a shot of them “in the act” I try for a shot with SOME evidence of conjugation. See it in this picture?
The Snake-of-the-Day headliner of this web site features photographs that we believe will interest our web site visitors. Each daily photograph will be posted at 11:00 am. central (GMT – 5) and replaced in 24 hours. Feel free to make suggestions regarding what snake photographs you would like to see in this daily feature. The animals pictured here are not for sale, unless otherwise noted, but you can find available surplus snakes for sale on the Surplus Page of this web site. We appreciate your patronage and welcome any suggestions you may have.

Both parents from Salmon heritage, there will be beautiful Salmons and Salmon Motleys from this union. They are expected to hatch in early July.
The Snake-of-the-Day headliner of this web site features photographs that we believe will interest our web site visitors. Each daily photograph will be posted at 11:00 am. central (GMT – 5) and replaced in 24 hours. Feel free to make suggestions regarding what snake photographs you would like to see in this daily feature. The animals pictured here are not for sale, unless otherwise noted, but you can find available surplus snakes for sale on the Surplus Page of this web site. We appreciate your patronage and welcome any suggestions you may have.

We stopped breeding the Hurricane variants of the Motley mutation years ago, but I think it’s time to bring them back. Here
is a couple of adults whose eggs will hatch in early July. See our Photo Gallery for other pictures of these beautiful mutants.
Each DAY at 11:00 am. ct (GMT – 5) we will post a different SMR snake being offered at a special price.
All snakes will be chosen for their rarity and/or unique beauty.
