bballmatt100 said:Joe, have you ever seen an anery with red inbetween the saddles? :sidestep:
Joejr14 said:This looks a lot like those ridiculous 'Amazon' corns.
CornLove said:What does that mean?? Amazon corn??
The breeder of the snake sent this pic to Kathy Love and she could'nt say what morph it was...Pretty special I think...The breeder is keeping the snake to see how he'll turn out. I have never seen a corn that look like this...
The following is taken from Rich's website on the Silver Queen Ghosts:CornLove said:This corn was bred by a friend of mine this summer. Is'nt he lovely? The mother is anery and the father a silverqueen as I understand it.
Therefore, going by Rich's definition of Silver Queen (and I'm pretty sure he's the one that started producing them, correct me if I'm wrong) you would have an anery x silver queen (which is anery and hypo) which would produce anery het hypo. Now it could just be the silver queen influence coming through but IMO I'm with Joe and that's an anery. Very pretty but an anery and not a new morph.Breeding trials I did in 2000 has shown me that this is genetically standard 'A' Anerythrism and Hypomelanism, but there is something different in them that presents a rather interesting looking variant of the Ghost.
Shep151 said:Lavender is said to mask Anery. If both parents were het Lavender, this could be a Lavender Anery.
Just figured I'd throw that into the soup :crazy02:
Lavender is said to mask Anery.
Joejr14 said:If that snake paired with an anery or charcoal doesn't either produce anerys or charcoal I'll do backflips from here to China.
I see nothing abnormal about that snake----it has pink hues. Do a search and check out Susan's ghosts and anerys---plenty have that same coloration.
I'd be VERY surprised if it's a new morph. New morphs take years to prove out---you don't hatch something out that perhaps look slightly off and proclaim it as a new morph.