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Expensive Corn snake?

ozo80

New member
My favorite morph is a Anerythristic Corn Snake. I might get my corn snake from a reptile show or something. I would like to get Anerythristic Corn snake for the reptile show but I was wanting to know if it was expensive morph.
 
Anery is not a really expensive morph because it´s very common.
Don´t know the prices on your shows but in germany you pay around 20-30€.
 
anerythristics are one of the most common morphs, you should be able to find one at a show for a pretty low price, under $50, unless you want motley or striped then it might be a bit more.
 
According to your profile you live in Atlanta, GA. Just so you know...ALL cornsnakes are technically illegal to own in your state. You can own an Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake though.... :sidestep:
 
According to your profile you live in Atlanta, GA. Just so you know...cornsnakes are technically illegal to own in your state. You can own an Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake though.... :sidestep:

whoa...a diamondback huh?...yikes...lol...I think I'd pass on that one:awcrap:
 
REALLY

:crying::crying:NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO:headbang::headbang:
 
Thank God I'm in Florida where you can have machine guns and reptiles.

You still need a federal permit and the approval of your local chief LEO for the machine guns, however....... :rolleyes:

When Connie and I were talking about moving from Maryland, we had to completely bypass considering Georgia for that reason about corn snakes. Matter of fact, quite likely we were likely breaking the law every time we drove THROUGH Georgia on the way to and from shows up north.
 
Georgia Laws is there a loop hole????

Most people think the law in Georgia is "can't own native non venomous reptiles and amphibians." If that were true, then you couldn't own corns, a couple of the rats and a few pituophis, you get the idea. HOWEVER, the law is written on the books as a ban on the species level. IE, all subspecies of Elaphe, lampropeltis, Pituophis, etc...are illegal. You can't own emoryi, cal kings, variable kings, etc. in Georgia legally. Kathy loves advertises on her site that albino Emoryi can be owned in Georgia but that is not the case. I spent many long hours on the phone with Georgia DNR discussing this and that is the law. If a snake is a hybrid but part of the hybrid is a native "species", then it is also illegal.

That said, I wonder if Geeorgia law makers have had the foresight to change the way the law is written. When this "native non venomous" laws were written, corns fell under Elaphe Guttata guttata, now they are recognized as Pantherophis. Is that a legal loop hole? I don't know, I moved out several years ago and haven't kept up with the laws there. I do know that they produce a list of animals that are banned based on their common name, so that may be their saving grace.

Some buisnesses are allowed to keep them, there are a few pet store wholesale supply houses that can keep them and ship them out. They have to obtain a permit but they can legally posess and sell native non venomous.

At any rate, if you are still reading, my reply to the original poster is that all is not lost. You can obtain a scientific and educational permit for your animal. The permit is easily obtained, just contact DNR and ask them about it. The permit will allow you to posess native non ven's but you must complete and document a certain amount of education hours, I think it is around 18 per year. You get some native stuff AFTER you get the permit and give a talk at a school. Get a science teacher to let you do a talk for them. Typically you can talk to one class but the teacher logs down you spoke to their class, that equates to around 7 hours of talking in one day. A few of those and you have met your criteria. The problem with the permit is that you open yourself up to random inspections of your facilities. They reserve the right ot inspect you at any time for any reason.

Sorry to be long and for any grammatical and spelling errors, Good luck

dc
 
an other snake

does anyone know of an other snake that is legal in the state of Georgia and is for beginners.
 
Most people think the law in Georgia is "can't own native non venomous reptiles and amphibians." If that were true, then you couldn't own corns, a couple of the rats and a few pituophis, you get the idea. HOWEVER, the law is written on the books as a ban on the species level. IE, all subspecies of Elaphe, lampropeltis, Pituophis, etc...are illegal. You can't own emoryi, cal kings, variable kings, etc. in Georgia legally. Kathy loves advertises on her site that albino Emoryi can be owned in Georgia but that is not the case. I spent many long hours on the phone with Georgia DNR discussing this and that is the law. If a snake is a hybrid but part of the hybrid is a native "species", then it is also illegal.

Technically true.....but.....

I've vended many of the GA shows and they DO NOT allow corns. However, they do allow cal kings and the such, great plains rats (emoryi), FL kings (have to look like FL kings...not those eastern king lookers), and other stuff. Basically, if it lives in Georgia and is non-venomous, you can't own it even if it is a color morph.

I spoke with he DNR people at the last show sometime last year and they said they were aware of the cornsnake change from Elaphe to Pantherophis so I don't believe that is a loophole.
 
hmm..well I paid 50 for Striker..but he was already a year old..maybe even a bit older..he had already been 2 feet..and Kunai was 60...but she's a stripe/mot anery...so I'm guessing those are good estimate prices..
 
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