HET092313

FOR SALE
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DAY092313
2011 male 37″ Corn Snake possibly het for Stripe, Anery, and Sunkissed eating frozen/thawed adult mice.  His $135.00 price includes U.S. FedEx Overnight service to any of the lower 48 contiguous United States.
 

BL082013

FOR SALE
 
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DAY082013
This 35″ 2011 male Bloodred is het for Striped Ghost.  He is currently eating frozen/thawed hopper mice.  His $175.00 price includes U.S. FedEx Overnight shipping.  

AM081813

FOR SALE
 
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DAY081813
A 38″ long 2011 female Amel, eating frozen/thawed adult mice.  One of the parents of this 2011 female was a Salmon Snow Motley, so she is het for Anery and Motley.  I’m reasonably certain she is a Red-Mask Amel mutant.  Her $225.00 price includes U.S. FedEx Overnight Delivery service. 

Tessera081913

FOR SALE
 
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DAY081913
This 2010 female Tessera (unknown hets) is 3″ long, eating frozen/thawed adult mice.  She will be of breedable size for 2014.
She has a slight scar on her nose from a cage injury when she was a hatchling.  While pushing against an air hole on the side
of her hatchling cage, she cut her nose right behind her rostral scales.  Scar is complete (of course) and it has never affected
her in any way.  $300.00 price includes U.S. FedEx overnight service.

Common-09-25-13

FOR SALE
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DAY092513

This 50″ long adult female corn snake is the result of pairing a Butter Corn with an Ultramel Motley Corn.  She is therefore het for at least Motley, Caramel, and either Ultra or Amel.  Of course, she loves eating frozen/thawed adult mice.  

Her $100.00 price (which includes FedEx overnight delivery to any of the lower 48 United States) reflects her least favorable asset. She is downright mean.  She has bitten me before, but since that is relatively uncommon behavior for her, what bothers me even more than that is her intolerance for being held.  She squrims and wriggles until I put her down.  Suffice to say, if you want her for making lots of baby corns, she’s a bargain, but if you are looking for a snake that loves to be handled, pass this one up. 

 

HetCorn092413

FOR SALE
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DAY092413
 This 2011 female is 36″ long and eating frozen/thawed adult mice.  She is the product of pairing a Neon Champagne Coral Snow to a Bloodred.  Her $150.00 price includes U.S. FedEx Overnight service to any of the lower 48 contiguous United States.   

 

blps081613

FOR SALE
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DAY081613 

This 2012 female low-white expression Pied-sided Bloodred Corn Snake shows very little lateral white.  She is 24″ long and eating frozen/thawed fuzzy mice.  Her $200.00 price includes U.S. FedEx Overnight service to any of the lower 48 contiguous United States.   

 

Buckskin Okeetee-13

NOW READY FOR SHIPPING
 
Buckskin Okeetee (no aka)
Most Commonly Used Name: Buckskin Okeetee
Mode of Genetic Inheritance: Dominant (wild-type) + Selective Variation
Morph Type: Selective Variation of the wild-type, Okeetee
Eye Color:  Black pupil & body ground colored iris

 

The Buckskin Okeetee is another example of the promotion of polygenic traits through selective breeding.  By breeding together specimens with an atypically tan ground coloration, through generational selection of pairing only the ones with the most buckskin ground coloration, we are now producing beautiful Okeetees with pale brown or tan ground colors.  Of course, this means that no mutations are involved, since instead, changes are made through selective breeding via changes in non-mutant gene interactions.

 

What to expect:
In both neonates and adults, the ground color should be obviously pale by comparison to typical Okeetees.   Note that neonate Okeetees of any persuasion are initially disappointing, as all their colors are drab through much of their youth.  Colors will change with maturity, but always get richer and more saturated through maturity.  As it is with most relatively new morphs, we don’t yet know what potential variation exists in Buckskin Okeetees, but the obvious target should have clean blotch and ground colors with little or no stippling or speckling that is often seen in the ground color zones of most non-mutant corns, heavy black blotch margins, buckskin-colored ground color zones, and richly saturated red blotches.
 
okex007
Do not expect any hatchling/neonate Okeetee to look anything like the adults.  This picture shows an adult female Extreme Okeetee with several of her newly hatched babies (no, she was not present when they hatched in the incubator).  This adult looked exactly like the babies shown in this image when she was their size.

 

Important Note:
  These images are not renderings of the actual animals being offered, (except for uniquely offered snakes found in the SURPLUS section of this web site).  We do not provide pictures of individual hatchling snakes for sale, nor do we recommend that you ever choose a new pet based on an image of its neonatal form.  Corns change so dramatically from hatchling to adult, they will NEVER have the same colors or contrasts throughout maturity. While most of the snakes we produce will mature to resemble the featured adult image(s) on our web site, unlike manufactured products that are respectively clones of each other, the nature of polygenic variation results in each animal being similar but not identical to others of its morph. The snake we select for you may not mature to be identical to the pictured examples, but will be chosen based on our experience of observing which neonates will mature to properly represent their respective morph.  We take this responsibility very seriously, and therefore publish the guarantee that we will exchange your SMR snake if it does not mature to be like our advertised examples.