Posted by:
DMong
at Wed Nov 23 02:50:05 2011 [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by DMong ]
Very nice stuff!....now you are REALLY talking my language with the Lampropeltis!..
BTW, that is a VERY nice textbook phenotype L.t.stuarti specimen!!. Do you have any origin history?, or locality data on that particular snake?. Anyway, you'd be hard pressed to find a better looking L.t.stuarti specimen ANYWHERE!..
Check out my photo gallery and you will see just a few......
http://serpentinespecialties.webs.com/apps/photos/
~Doug
Female Outer Banks king (L.g.sticticeps) with her clutch

them hatching
 Sinaloan milk
 Adult female extreme hypo
 Green Florida king

golden/bronze Florida king

Awesome "high-yellow" L.g.floridana. Sire to above green female and golden/bronze floridana

extreme hypo male

tricolor hypo Honduran milk

Blanchard's milksnake (L.t.blanchardi)

vanished amelanistic Honduran

Female L.g.splendida

Aberrant/striped male Outer Banks king

South Florida Mole King (L.c.occipitolineata)

Mexican Black king (L.g.nigrita)

female ghost Honduran milk

female extreme hypo Honduran

male Mandarin Ratsnake (formerly E. mandarina)

female Brazilian Rainbow boa (Epicrates c.cenchria)

female 50-50 Cal. king (L.g.californiae)

Big 8 plus foot female Colombian Boa

Lavender and hypo lavender cornsnake hatchlings

amel nelsoni sired by t-plus nelsoni

wild-caught whacky aberrant corn captured near Everglades National Park.

F-1 locality-specific t-plus "moonshine" greenish ratsnake (natural intergrade Black x Yellow rat)originating from Horry county, S.Carolina
 ----- "a snake in the grass is a GOOD thing" 
 serpentinespecialties.webs.com
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