Anery Tessera 07-04-17

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This 13″ 2017 male Anery Tessera is about a month old, eating frozen/thawed 1-DAY-old pinky mice.  Both parents were het for the Scaleless gene mutation so he is 66.6% possibly-het for Scaleless.  His $205.00 price includes     

Amel Motley 06-28-17

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This 22″ 2016 male Amel Motley is currently eating frozen/thawed small fuzzy or large pinky mice.  One of his parents was het for Sunkissed, so that likely explains the yellow ground color.  Therefore, it is likely that this one is het Sunkissed?  His $145.00 price includes      

Super Salmon Snow 06-27-17

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This 2016 male Super Salmon Snow corn snake is so named SUPER because he has both of the paired gene copies of the Dominate-To-Wild-Type Red Factor mutation, making him twice as colorful as Visual Het Snows that have only one of the paired gene copies. In the course of one more year of maturity, he will be notably more color-saturated as he is now.  He is currently 24″ long, eating large frozen/thawed large fuzzy mice.    His $265.00 USD price includes  

Pied-sided Bloodred 06-26-17

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This 2016 female 21″ Pied-sided Bloodred corn snake is currently eating large frozen/thawed pinky or small f/t fuzzy mice.   I’d call her a medium-white Pied-sided Bloodred though she may seem to have low-white-expression because photographing all of the white on these mutant compounds is difficult, if not impossible. Her $155.00 USD price includes Her price is lower than most medium-white P/S Bloods because she snapped at me several times during the photo shoot this evening.  What a grouch?!  ADDITIONAL PIC . . . 

Same snake from as much the opposite of pic one as I could shoot?  

Pied-sided Bloodred 06-22-17

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2017 13″ female Pied-sided Bloodred corn snake for sale.  She’s currently eating frozen/thawed small pinky mice.  Some of you are aware that the reason I named these Pied-sided (aka: p/s) instead of Pie-bald, Pied, or White-sided was because I knew that two gene mutations that are currently missing in the corn snake hobby are White-sided and Pied.  Both have been demonstrated in many other serpent species, so it’s a foregone conclusion that they WILL be demonstrated in corns.  I didn’t want to ruin either of those future discoveries by using the names Pied or White-sided, since the hallmark of this mutation is that the white is mostly relegated to the sides and such white patches are generally disconnected and random in lateral zones.  One name I toyed with when I first hatched these was “Red-sided” since regardless of how much and where the white patches are exhibited, they all had otherwise shockingly RED sides.  The dorsal markings on toDAY’s featured SOTD will greatly diffuse and will be deeply red at maturity.  The lateral zones below the dorso-lateral demarcation line between longitudinal pattern zoness will also be solidly red, except where the white is showing now.  When I first named this morph I was tempted to call them Red-sided Bloodreds, but it was somewhat of a redundant name.  Some pied-sided Bloodreds have no lateral white at all, but their resemblance to p/s Bloodreds is obvious, in the realm of the shockingly stark red sides. Her  $195.00 USD price includes   to any of the lower-48 United States because she is what we consider a low-expression p/s Bloodred.  Medium- and High-whites are considerably more rare in the hobby and consequently more expensive.   . . .   S O L D 

 

Same snake in different lighting and pose.