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Not another season beginning post.

HerpsOfNM

My name's Blurryface...
Who am I kidding...yes it is!

2014 season started on Friday the 13th with 3 of 7 (originally 8, 1 infertile) little heads found poking out at 6:30am from my DeBaca County, NM male X albino female Great Plains rat snake. 4, 5, and 6 joined the world yesterday and I'm still waiting on #7.

Thanks goes out to John Stolz for the lovely, but grumpy albino emoryi female.

Some history on the male. Back in 2002 I was invited for some herping in eastern NM with my best friend, another herping buddy, and a mutual friend of theirs. With permission of some property owners, we began searching a ghost town. The area had some old cisterns, most of which were capped off or in some way inaccessible. The lone one not capped was found by my best friend and resulted in the following:

Cistern-Series.jpg


That's a 30,000 lbs tow strap with my best friend anchoring and our herping buddy guiding me down, since I was the lightest. The mutual friend is the one behind the camera with his son watching as I go down.

As you can see, that wasn't the only snake. Also down there with the emoryi was a western coachwhip. It surprised us as both snakes were thin, yet the coachwhip had not cannibalized (snakes are a known food item of coachwhips) the GP rat.

The "rescue".
Chris%20in%20Well-2b.jpeg


This snake is special to me as it was my first NM emoryi and only the 2nd known specimen from DeBaca County. Ironically, the trip's origins tied to the county record animal, which was a gravid female found by the gentleman that snapped the above series. He kept her until she laid her eggs, pickled her for the county record voucher, and incubated the eggs. The trip was planned around the legal re-introduction of her offspring, where mom was originally collected.

Unfortunately for me I've been back a half dozen times to the site where my male was collected, but have yet to locate another emoryi from there.

On to the baby pics....all pre-hatch shed. Hopefully next weekend I'll have the time to be snapping some shots of them in post-hatch shed color.

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These babies are HUGE (so were the eggs), weighing in from 11.8 to 14.5g. I think my largest corn babies last year were around the 9g mark.

Speaking of corns, and keeping theme with everyone else, I'll keep adding to this thread as more stuff hatches. Laid the same date (April 18th) as the emoryi eggs were Flicker (Tessera het butter stripe) X Ash (granite, or anery bloodred). 11 of 12 eggs have made it this far, but no pippies yet. :smash:
 
They're really cute. I like their skinny saddles that make them look sort of banded. Neat rescue pictures too!
 
I did, but when I was out there last year I found it and 1 other uncapped. I haven't seen a snake there since 2002. Even spoke with the property owner and was told it had been pretty dry the last few seasons and he'd not seen much; an occasional rattler here or there, but not really anything else.

FWIW, baby #7 had slit the egg last night around 11:30ish and was poking about 2 inches of head and neck out this morning.
 
Exciting. Cool pics.
I would soo be down that cistern on a rope. And have once or twice. But no herps present.

Nice hatchlings, too.
 
Great pics Chris!!

Thank you!
On a side note...need to get another payment out to you, but dealing with crazy end of quarter times. Not much free time to get to the bank. :sobstory:

Exciting. Cool pics.
I would soo be down that cistern on a rope. And have once or twice. But no herps present.

Nice hatchlings, too.

It was quite fun and a great trip looking back on it. If memory serves me well, my best friend and I road cruised 17 snakes the night prior on our drive up to meet the other friends. Not a bad haul for that portion of NM!

Chris, I've long admired your photography...once again great as always!

Thanks Mitch! It's not often I hear that in all honesty. This has pretty much become the only forum I frequent, including facebook (fb free for 3.5 years strong). You know of my photography more from the field herping side of things for that matter. The feedback is appreciated.

Replies aside..........:noevil:
 
Not to be shown up...:nyah:

Day 60. My temps might have been a tad warmer than last season. Last season's eggs, if I calculated correctly, took an average of 62 days to hatch. I need to invest in a Bluetooth/wifi waterproof temperature probe (if such exists and is affordable) so I can more accurately monitor temps throughout incubation.

CC2014-FLxASHN-001.jpg


I present CC2014-FLxASHN-001, the one cruising. The little booger with its head poking out is an ugly dominant striped thingy, but sucked its neck in.

Dad is "Flicker" my tessera het butter stripe. Mom is "Ash" a granite with unknown hets.

I also had baby #7 from the emoryi hatch out on Monday. Unfortunately the little one has a decent spine kink about 3/4 down.
 
Dunno what's going on here, but I'm thinking hypo.

This is same angle as prior eggs photo above. The tessera poking just it's head out bolted for the incubation media below. However, now the one that was slit above has it's head poking out in this shot.

MysteryCorn.jpg
 
Clutch #3 on it's way. Found this little unwrapping happening at about 6pm I believe. I opted to have some macro fun and patiently sat watching photo ops unfold.

This clutch is Flicker (SMR Tessera, het butter/amber stripe) x Rainer (SMR Reverse Okeetee, no known hets yet)

WARNING: I went 1:1 with my 60mm micro lens. I opted to bump my normal file dimensions from 800x531 to 1084x720. File sizing should be below 300kb though - more than manageable on a broadband connection.

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Vertical pics to follow in another reply.
 
And now the 1:1 macro fun. I wish I had a reversal ring for my micro lens so I could go beyond 1:1 ratio for the egg tooth. But for now I'll remain more than content with my favorite Nikon lens. The inset photos are 100% crops.

CC2014-FRAT-001-7-21-2014-3.jpg


CC2014-FRAT-001-7-21-2014-5.jpg


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Great photos! Congrats on the babies!

Thank you...saving the best clutch for last with about a week more of incubation on it.

WOW Chris, those are some A-M-A-Z-I-N-G shots man !!!
Can't wait to see more.

Walter
:crazy02:BOUT' CORNS !!

Thank you sir. Every once in a while I take time to have a little more fun with the photography other than the proverbial, textbook field guide profile photos.

Those are some INSANE shots man!! That first pipper looks like it's gonna be REALLY nice as well!

Thanks! Before it popped the snout out I got a looksee at a long red marking along the dorsal. Pretty sure it's a tessera.

I need to do a 100% crop of the eye from one of the shot below. When I was HDMI'd up on the TV checking the pics through the camera one of the shots had some awesomeness going on with eye detail.

HOPEFULLY, one of these ugly RO tesseras that's bound to pop out will be female for the male Extreme Okeetee Tessera het overpriced I need to pay you for. :noevil: The upper far right egg in the clutch shot had a 1/4 inch slice in it this morning at about 8am. I haven't spied on the bator since as I was cleaning cages from last year's holdbacks/purchases.
 
this season's been a weak showing for the tessera trait thus far (3 of 18 for what's OOE so far), but it seems to be making up for some nice non-tessera babies. Got some lookers in just the albinos alone in here though...

Pile-o-worms-6-23-2014.jpg


Steve, I have a feeling you may appreciate what's hiding in that pile once I get some post-hatching shed pics. I'm stoked for what that albino tessera is showing for a possible white inner border, assuming that doesn't back fill with red with age.

Mostly not noticeable in the above is that there are 3 more pipped eggs in the shot, 2 more albino noses and 1 normally pigmented snout. Egg #10 hasn't slit yet.
 
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