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A 2018 Cherry Amel corn snake (roughly six weeks old). Like all red-modifying corn mutants, these get more and more red as they mature. PIC 2 toDAY shows his adult grandsire. PIC 2 . . .
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A 2018 Cherry Amel corn snake (roughly six weeks old). Like all red-modifying corn mutants, these get more and more red as they mature. PIC 2 toDAY shows his adult grandsire. PIC 2 . . .
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Two Anaconda Western Hognose snakes; one Albino and one Toffee Belly.
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Finally breedable adult size now, Stephen, after cooling this winter I plan to wed your pair of these stunning Baja Mountain Kingsnakes (Lampropeltis agalma).
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{product id=1967}

This 2016 adult Tessera corn snake is currently 34″ long, eating frozen/thawed small adult mice. $205.00 plus $39.00
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{product id=1968}

This 2016 adult male Tessera corn snake is currently 33″ long, eating frozen/thawed small adult mice. $185.00 plus $39.00
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A yearling male HYPO PEWTER sibling of the Dilute Pewter Tessera (Dilute, Charcoal, Diffused, Masque, Tessera) corn snake, produced by John Finsterwald of ColoradoCorns.com that was featured on August 1, 2018. Thanks, John.
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Okay, not really a SNAKE, but collaterally related to snake keeping. I find 10-20 of these in snakes cages every year; dead, alive, and sometimes drowned in water bowls. I also find between three and 10 scorpions inside snake cages in all three of our reptile buildings. While I have never proven that any of my snakes were ever impacted by them (since their tough scales largely protect them from the fangs of Arachnids) it’s remotely possible for spiders to be responsible for reptile injuries and perhaps even deaths. No, I do not like spiders, but knowing that their secondary purpose for injecting venom is defense, it’s not as dangerous as one might suspect–to let a spider crawl on your skin, but I don’t recommend agitating them while in contact with you. That reality did not make me complacent, however. I never took my eyes off this Reclusa during photography with my cell phone. Especially when it raced up my arm a couple of times. Thought I was going to need clean underwear during one of those sprints toward my shirt sleeve?
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Yes, I did it again. NO snake toDAY, but an example of a topic that’s crucial to snake keeping; MICE. I have only skipped two or three years of raising mice since 1971. As long as they are housed outside the home, they are a joy to have, and are a convenience that also facilitates profits in the business of selling snakes. Naturally, I may love having them because they are so critical to the success of my first pet passion, reptiles. I thought for sure the featured mouse toDAY was going to have 19 babies when I photographed her a few DAYs ago, but alas, she only had 17. I’m positive the record litter surpasses my lifetime record of 23 live-born babies from one mouse, but the strain I have now is highly fertile. Like my friend, Jud McClanahan in Kansas, I have not added a single specimen to my latest strain of these highly productive lab mice since 1999 (Jud has gone even longer than that). Starting with 350 units (seven Freedom Breeders) in 1999 I’m now down to using only two racks, containing 80 units. I still spend over $25K annually for frozen mice, in spite of producing an average of 120 pinkies per DAY (when most of my mouse breeders are young adults, the average is over 200 per DAY). Were it not for the restrictions of time and energy, I’d get back to 5-7 racks, and perhaps be able to stop buying frozen mice. BTW, we never sell snakes that are eating only LIVE mice. I only have live mice so I can freeze the very smallest pinkies for those newly hatched corns. BONUS PIC . . .
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{product id=1969}

This 2018 male Ultramel Anery Tessera corn snake is currently 14″ long, eating frozen/thawed small pinky mice. His $135.00 price includes
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{product id=1970}

This 2018 male Ultramel Anery Tessera corn snake is currently 13″ long, eating frozen/thawed pinky mice. His $145.00 price includes