i've just been reading how ultra is not corn snake its gray rat so my question to you all is why breed something to a corn and pass it off as a pure corn, why not just tell the truth and tell people they are hybrids. and what else in the corn snake morphs are hybrids with other snake species (i'm not on about the stuff we already know about i mean the other morphs i mean for all we know a Palmetto might be part king snake)
now i'm going to sell all my corns if that what they are, i think ill start a collection of old world rat snakes at least i will know they are pure and not crossed with any thing you want,
i think the american government are right they should make all reptile owners register there animals so we now who's breeding what.
I'm sorry, but I must have missed it, but when was that actually PROVEN?
I do apologize as I was a bit harsh yesterday. It was NOT a good day and my irritation from a situation at work spilled over onto the forum. However, IMO, if someone is that concerned about their snakes being pure, then they need to not only do their homework, but ask as many questions as possible before buying. I do not hide information. My breeding records are available to all in my personal forum, every snake I sell comes with complete ACR information for registration, and if you ask me, I will provide anyone with as much information about anything related to my snakes as I have. I will NOT, however, spoon-feed people. If you don't know the genetics of a golddust, then you really don't care about the hybrid theory surrounding it when you buy it. When I list a clutch of hatchlings as available for sale that are numbered sequentially and they go in this order: ...#24 ultramel motley het stripe, #25 ultramel anery stripe, #26 amel stripe, #27 ultramel motley het stripe, #28 amel motley het stripe, #29 ultramel stripe... you can pretty much guarantee that the amel stripe and amel motley are from a pairing with ultra in it. And as I said before, when in doubt ASK.
I'm sorry, but I must have missed it, but when was that actually PROVEN?
Does it even matter?
Can you guarantee any WC corn, ever, was 100% P. guttatus?
i don't think it has yet but how would we know some people are saying there pure and others have labeled them as gray rat crosses so my question is, i've just bread my pair of golddusts motley het anery the babys will be Gold Dust Motley, Ultra Caramel Motley, Butter Motley, Xanthic Snow Motley, Ultramel Anery Caramel Motley and Ultra Caramel Anery Motley.
so what do i sell the babys as are they corns or are they hybrids or are they possible hybrids. and if they are hybrids 2 of them dont carry the ultra gene so are they hybrids ?
someone please help because i'm at a loss and i'm kind of new to breeding this has confused me and i don't want it to confuse other new breeders
I personally would NOT buy a corn which has ultra in its background. I don't care if it's one or ten generations back in the past - I don't want them. Meanwhile it is becoming harder and harder to buy an amel, caramel, butter or whatever which are for sure not ultra related. Everybody can breed, keep and create ultra morphs, no problem, but please please please label them as ultra related. Not only the ultra stuff but also the NONultra byproducts like butters, fires, amels, etc.
If all breeders make an exeption for ultra (of course, most did and do it), we all could sell also "real" hybrids without labeling them as such. That wouldn't make a difference....who wants that? Not me! I'm sure I'm not the only one .:shrugs:
It is pretty disturbing that 90% of the breeders/keepers make a big exeption for ultra. Since I heard for the first time of Ultra, I heard those hybrid rumors as often as I've never heard of any other morph - is it only the fact it acts codom to amel that anybody hikes his shoulders or why is this the common practice?
Again, everyone can have, buy, sell, breed and keep ultras. I don't have a problem with hybrids or stuff which is most likely hybrid, I just have a problem when breeders don't label them as what they are. Beginners often don't have a hint of knowledge of the whole colour morph thing, those are the real distributors of that stuff but what should they do when they buy a "corn" from a breeder who doesn't tell the buyer that ultra might be something which is not guaranteed "pure". That is the problem I see here in Europe and also in the States. Doesn't make me more enthusiastic for this hobby, stuff like that really spoils the party. :shrugs:
Good luck seperating the ultramel anery caramels from the ultra anery caramels and caramel snow in your potential clutch.
How many tens of generations are we away from the grey rat, anyway? Does it even matter? Can you guarantee any WC corn, ever, was 100% P. guttatus?