Yes, and while over there you could have also gotten a few more genuinely authentic milksnake subspecies imported here to the states. As there are precious few uncompromised Latin American subspecies left in the hobby now. There are definitely a small number of them to be had if one knows the right sources, but not many. And there are a few types that there are absolutely NONE of here at all. By the same token though, that is what makes the ones that ARE still very authentic so highly revered and sought after by a few of us hardcore milksnake buffs :dancer:
Anyway, I didn't mean to steer off-topic, .........just sayin' :grin01:
BTW, the lone killer L.t. nelsoni specimen I got from you back in 1995 in Ft. Lauderdale at the "Fern Forest" show was one of THE nicest "textbook" specimens there was in the hobby before they were even much known by most hobbyists just before the rush to produce amel nelsoni and get more crossed into the far more commonly kept Sinaloan's in the hobby. Now good examples are harder to find, and there are far more crossed intermediates in today's hobby. That and most people not knowing the key meristic characteristics between the two anyway are the reasons for this. But heck, it isn't any different than most other colubrids in the hobby now. There is more hybrids and man-made crosses today than anyone could possibly shake a stick at. Pretty disappointing to me and many others, but that is just how it is now and actually makes some of the real examples of things still left un-tainted the truly rare stuff now.....:shrugs:
cheers, ~Doug
Yeah, I hear you... I was once pretty heavy into the neotropical triangulums, and spent a LOT of time researching the various subspecies identified. I came to the conclusion that it was a fool's errand to try to get REAL locality specimen. I talked to several importers who let on that they would get batches of milk snakes from any particular country that was allowing exports at that time, and were collected all over Central America. When they hit the shores of the USA, people would pick through all those imports and apply labels on them based merely on what they LOOKED like without having and actual locality data at all. To make matters worse, reading what official descriptions existing of the milk snakes pretty much just made matters worse. There was so much overlap in identifying features that you really might just as well do what those importers were doing, as the results would be the same. Heck, how many people remember that the original albino Hondurans were REALLY first called albino Central American Milk Snakes (L.t. polyzona)? Heck I remember talking to a guy one year who was selling aberrantly patterned Sinaloans that next year magically became Nelson's milks after the albino Nelson's hit the streets...
That's about the time that I decided to get out of the triangulums....