• Hello!

    Either you have not registered on this site yet, or you are registered but have not logged in. In either case, you will not be able to use the full functionality of this site until you have registered, and then logged in after your registration has been approved.

    Registration is FREE, so please register so you can participate instead of remaining a lurker....

    Please be certain that the location field is correctly filled out when you register. All registrations that appear to be bogus will be rejected. Which means that if your location field does NOT match the actual location of your registration IP address, then your registration will be rejected.

    Sorry about the strictness of this requirement, but it is necessary to block spammers and scammers at the door as much as possible.

My Corn Snakes

tagak

New member
Correct me if I'm wrong.

My new babies.
Anery
20140609_195937.jpg


Amel
20140609_195827.jpg



my big babies

Female Amel
20140605_210611.jpg


I don't know the morp of this.
sold to me as okeetee (het stripe het snow)
20140605_210418.jpg


My Okeetee
20140605_210232.jpg


Male Amel
20140605_210154.jpg


Hypo Okeetee
20140605_202906.jpg
 
First one you say is anery, is in fact normal. The orange on its back will spread as it grows up.

The two amels are indeed amels.

The "okeetee het stripe snow" is quite far from being okeetee, seeing as it has virtually no saddle borders. Okeetees are known for their thick black saddle borders.

The next okeetee seems to have saddle borders that aren't that fat, but it could be locality okeetee if it was bred from those lines or caught in the area.

Amel is indeed amel.

Last one doesn't appear to be hypo okeetee, but rather just hypo. Same reason as above with the saddle borders.
 
Agreed with above, except I think the first okeetee may be a hypo. But definitely not an okeetee.
 
First one you say is anery, is in fact normal. The orange on its back will spread as it grows up.
The two amels are indeed amels.
The "okeetee het stripe snow" is quite far from being okeetee, seeing as it has virtually no saddle borders. Okeetees are known for their thick black saddle borders.
The next okeetee seems to have saddle borders that aren't that fat, but it could be locality okeetee if it was bred from those lines or caught in the area.
Amel is indeed amel.
Last one doesn't appear to be hypo okeetee, but rather just hypo. Same reason as above with the saddle borders.

Agreed with above, except I think the first okeetee may be a hypo. But definitely not an okeetee.


thank you.

pure morph Corn Snake is not many here in the Philippines so breeder just mates what available snakes thay have, so the morphs is just rambled.
the okeetee that i said in the 5th picture is the normal okeetee sold here.

I told the seller of the hatchling that his anery is a normal, he insited that its an anery. hehehe
anyway he sold to me that 2 hatchling as female.
can you gender a hatchling according to their tail witout popping?
 
The first baby is definitely not an Anery, it is a Normal.

The Amel baby can possibly be sexed by holding the tail up to a light, and looking for the shadows of hemipenes. (You can do this with the lighter morphs, like Amel and Snow)
Unfortunately, you cannot do that with the Normal.

With babies, popping is the best way (done by someone who is trained to do it, you do not want to hurt the baby), otherwise, wait til they're bigger and use a probe to determine the sex.
 
The first baby is definitely not an Anery, it is a Normal.

The Amel baby can possibly be sexed by holding the tail up to a light, and looking for the shadows of hemipenes. (You can do this with the lighter morphs, like Amel and Snow)
Unfortunately, you cannot do that with the Normal.

With babies, popping is the best way (done by someone who is trained to do it, you do not want to hurt the baby), otherwise, wait til they're bigger and use a probe to determine the sex.

thanks for the info. :)
 
Thanks for sharing the photos!! All are adorable :)
And good to see someone so "far" away on the forum -- I mean, the internet itself isn't usually too far from anyone ;) but I guess far from the starting point in the USA. And far from me in Canada!
 
Thanks for sharing the photos!! All are adorable :)
And good to see someone so "far" away on the forum -- I mean, the internet itself isn't usually too far from anyone ;) but I guess far from the starting point in the USA. And far from me in Canada!

thank you NH93.

I love Cons Snakes, I have friends that has many snakes most of them has Ball Pythons i'm the only One that has many Corn Snakes.

Exotic pets here in tha Philippine is booming.
Pure and high morphs of Corn Snakes are too expensive here. :(

I hope to breed my Corns next season.
 
Okeetees, the morph not locality, used to be orange snakes with big black borders.
Then people started breeding snakes with poor orange coloration plus big black borders and call them (buckskin) okeetee to.

Your orange snakes, pics 4-5 and 7, might have been selectively bred for orange pigmentation.
They are very handsome but not okeetees.
 
Okeetees, the morph not locality, used to be orange snakes with big black borders.
Then people started breeding snakes with poor orange coloration plus big black borders and call them (buckskin) okeetee to.

Your orange snakes, pics 4-5 and 7, might have been selectively bred for orange pigmentation.
They are very handsome but not okeetees.

im really starting to think i was sold a buckskin as an extreme okeetee, shes about to be 10 months old and still no orange background color
 
Back
Top