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Blue cornsnakes??

Even at that, Serp...

Their can be a significant variation when you compare individuals Anery and Ghost...

Some have more greys, some have more browns. It does depend on the look of the parents of course; but in all honesty, these "Blue" Motley wouldn't be anything special. We don't go slapping odd ball names on every different color phase of Anery, do we? *lol*
 
I have not seen an adult "blue" mot. but i have seen a hachling and they do apear to have a slite blue tint to there normal color. In my opinon i don't think that they really deserve their own trade name.
 
Sorry for jumping on your back about the cat thing Billybobob..BUT some little kid could read it and get a "cool" idea to microwave a cat...thats all im sayin is all..being a cat lover doesnt make me reading that any more comfortable, especially thinking some immature person could see that "oh this guy wrote it so it must be cool so i can do it" Ok enough bout that

My anery corns got blue eyes:)
 
ok, gues theres not really blue motleys....ok

they still look good, but i think that I am going th bloodred way, because that is what the breeder has in yearlings

is it true that butter corns are hard feeders???

BEN
 
b23ball23 said:
ok, gues theres not really blue motleys....ok

they still look good, but i think that I am going th bloodred way, because that is what the breeder has in yearlings

is it true that butter corns are hard feeders???

BEN

Actually, the striped corns and bloodred corns are notorius for being difficult feeders. After being outcrossed, though, this problem seems to have dissipated, if not disappeared. The original lines of these morphs used to hatch out tiny, and grow to be somewhat frail. Most lines now have been outcrossed to other morphs and are actualy growing quite well, feeding quite well, and growing to be very hardy animals.
 
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