First one you say is anery, is in fact normal. The orange on its back will spread as it grows up.
The two amels are indeed amels.
The "okeetee het stripe snow" is quite far from being okeetee, seeing as it has virtually no saddle borders. Okeetees are known for their thick black saddle borders.
The next okeetee seems to have saddle borders that aren't that fat, but it could be locality okeetee if it was bred from those lines or caught in the area.
Amel is indeed amel.
Last one doesn't appear to be hypo okeetee, but rather just hypo. Same reason as above with the saddle borders.
Agreed with above, except I think the first okeetee may be a hypo. But definitely not an okeetee.
The first baby is definitely not an Anery, it is a Normal.
The Amel baby can possibly be sexed by holding the tail up to a light, and looking for the shadows of hemipenes. (You can do this with the lighter morphs, like Amel and Snow)
Unfortunately, you cannot do that with the Normal.
With babies, popping is the best way (done by someone who is trained to do it, you do not want to hurt the baby), otherwise, wait til they're bigger and use a probe to determine the sex.
Thanks for sharing the photos!! All are adorable
And good to see someone so "far" away on the forum -- I mean, the internet itself isn't usually too far from anyonebut I guess far from the starting point in the USA. And far from me in Canada!
Okeetees, the morph not locality, used to be orange snakes with big black borders.
Then people started breeding snakes with poor orange coloration plus big black borders and call them (buckskin) okeetee to.
Your orange snakes, pics 4-5 and 7, might have been selectively bred for orange pigmentation.
They are very handsome but not okeetees.