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Today's photo shoot: corns in a tree.

antsterr

Always mostly awesome
A completely natural habitat for a bunch of completely natural looking corn snakes.
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This is Marinda an '08 pure butter corn, strangest looking butter I've ever seen but I saw the parents and yeah, she's weird. She has two brothers that came our all orange as well, I have one of them, I will be interesting to see if they produce all orange offspring.
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Mordecai, my first corn snake, an 04 angry
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'11 as yet unnamed abel caramel lavender motley, I'm excite to see what she ends up looking like
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Kranzy, an 04 normal het nothing.
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Iglesias, 09 snow and the first double homo anything I produced. They may be extremely common and old news but snow are amazing!
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Part 2

Kranzy again, I thought this photo turned out really good.
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Malachi, '05 butter. This pour guy had to be force fed for the first six months of his life, anole scenting eventually got him eating. Then he almost died of an infection when my whole collection got hit 3 years ago. Three others died but he and the rest responded well to anti-biotects, the in treating the infection that showed up on his vent with a special antibacterial soap the vet gave, things went wrong again and the soap caused his skin to peel off leaving his whole tail one big scab. But he healed from that and has been a champ ever since.
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Yosemite, '09 normal het bloodred caramel and ultra-amel. The het blood really shows on him.
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Pomplamoose, '10 lavender male het hypo motley
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Flavius, '10 butter motley. I have a thing for yellow snakes.
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Prescot, '10 normal het butter (orange butter). I kept this guys back because of his odd pattern. He has the letter H over and over down his back rather than normal saddles. A few people suggested that temperature spikes during his incubation could have caused him and several of his siblings to develop unusual patterns and colours.
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Thanks for having a look
 
Prescot, '10 normal het butter (orange butter). I kept this guys back because of his odd pattern. He has the letter H over and over down his back rather than normal saddles. A few people suggested that temperature spikes during his incubation could have caused him and several of his siblings to develop unusual patterns and colours.
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Thats an odd guy! Handsome!
I'd breed him to an aztec.
/ Niklas
 
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