The shed skin thing is a great idea and one that would've never occurred to me! My normal's pattern shows completely through whenever he sheds... the time it happened I worried he'd lost some scales or something!I am sure this will not sit well with you, but you need to take some responsibility in the error also. You stated you "thought it was too good to be true" and in a later response to another poster you stated you didn't think it was a hypo. So, you can't just blame the store, you have to follow your gut and then research also.
The snake has way too much melanin to be a hypo in my opinion, but then I have been wrong before in my life. If you want to check to be sure before breedings, then look to the shed skins. The shed skin of a hypo doesn't show melanin from the pattern. If the skin is clear, then it is a hypo, if you can see the pattern, then not hypo.
dc
I have hypos that show pattern on their sheds, so that's not a viable resource for determining hypo vs normal. It's already been pointed out by a valued member that hypos can be widely variable. Breeding trials are your best bet to prove hypo or not.
I have hypos that show pattern on their sheds, so that's not a viable resource for determining hypo vs normal. It's already been pointed out by a valued member that hypos can be widely variable. Breeding trials are your best bet to prove hypo or not.
I don't understand why people buy and breed petstore animals at all (except feeder mice) but that's just me. Especially since the pet market is so over-saturated with cornsnakes as it is. A pet store is for pets, not for breeding stock.
just cuaght something, you said "on the head". What about the body, does the dorsal or lateral pattern show up on these same corns?
dc
I didn't say "on the head". Not sure what you read?? I find pattern on the entire shed.