I think you should take your time building your collection, too. Breeding is a huge job, bigger than it sounds, and a lot of responsibility to take on. You have to first get the parent snakes to hook up, then monitor the female to make sure she is gravid, then, if she's gravid, you must buy an incubator with very specific requirements for humidity and heat and gently place any eggs she drops in it, while making she she doesn't become eggbound, and once the babies hatch you'll need to regularly clean, 2 - 30 containers including the parents' tanks at any given time, plus buy and thaw out all the food, keep track of who's eating and gaining weight and who's not, find everyone homes, and then you'll probably worry whether they went to good homes or not! Besides that, in a few months you may find snakes or animals you find more interesting. For example, when I first got into the hobby, my whole world was corn snakes. But after caring for one for quite some time, and checking out my friends' collections of varied reptiles, I've found that, while I love my current corn, I would never get one again as they're rather bland snakes in terms of personality and activity.