When someone puts the label of "Okeetee" on a corn snake, it brings to mind a phenotype consisting of wide saddle borders and a rich coloration in both the saddles and the ground color.
Originally, the term "Okeetee" was reserved for those normal snakes, or their direct descendants, from the locality around the Okeetee Hunt Club. They were prized because of their natural good looks Then breeders were selectively breeding snakes for that look, which was known as "Okeetee-phase", but soon, everything with that look, no matter the locality, was being called "Okeetee", then the look was refined leading to the Abbott's Okeetee. The amel version became the Reverse Okeetee, showing wide white borders on a rich orange ground color, but even in those, the ground color soon didn't matter and all the snake needed was a wide border. And now any corn snake morph with a wide border is getting the label of "Okeetee". I love the look, but I really wish they would go back to the original standard of having to have a rich ground color as well as using the term "Okeetee-phase" so that the few actual locality animals can have the honor of being called by their true original name...Okeetee.