Mark Dwight
New member
Ok, I'm still confused on what to call this "new" morph. What do you think it should be called?
That would be "unanimity" (agreeing completely), not "continuity" (an unbroken coherent whole).Chris Olson said:There doesn't have to be 100% continuity.
shed'n my skin said:I guess I like cinder, I have gotten used to it and I like the fact it starts with C for anery C. Seems to have caught on anyway, I used to just call them z's, but I've been calling them cinder for a while now so it would be kind of hard to start calling them ashy.
Just as "mocha" was displaced by "lavender", "ashy" is running a distant second to "cinder". The first to discover a morph may choose a name for it, but that doesn't guarantee that the corn keeping public will stay with it. As most of us seem inclined to use cinder, that is the name that is likely to stick.PJCReptiles said:Rich has the right to call it what he wants. I feel that Cinder is the best name that describes or will hold true to the description of the snake.
jaxom1957 said:Just as "mocha" was displaced by "lavender", "ashy" is running a distant second to "cinder". The first to discover a morph may choose a name for it, but that doesn't guarantee that the corn keeping public will stay with it. As most of us seem inclined to use cinder, that is the name that is likely to stick.
Topazfyre said:I think it would be nice if it were like Charcoal, which is also refered to genetically as Anery Type B- expect it would be Cinder, genetically Anery Type C.
carol said:Man, all the "Anery C" votes are suprising me. Maybe we should post pics more often.
A lot of Cinders have MUCH more red and than this one, but this was the first close up I could find. I see way too much red for Anery to be a good term.