Posted by:
HighEndHerpsInc
at Sat Apr 28 10:08:18 2007 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by HighEndHerpsInc ]
Thanks Jim. Sure, it's a pretty good year. We were hoping more girls would go for us but this still isn't too bad. We had the usual number of girls "dud out" on us and unfortunately a dozen or so that just didn't "take" for us. But that's the way it goes. You can never expect all your females to go for you every year. You gotta take the bad with the good.
Thanks for the best wishes, etc. I'll be posting many pics of the babies when they hatch with each clutch. We still don't know what many of these will look like since we have some "never before" breedings/clutches. So far we have two clutches of 50/50 cateaters from breedings involving green patternless rock males to albino granite females. We also have clutches from albino green females bred to green patternless rock males. We are very excited about all of these as they hold so much limitless potential. Not only can they be bred to each other to produce an amazing smorgasbord of visible morphs, but they can be bred to albino granites to make first generation granite het albino cateaters 50% het for green patternless, albino granite cateaters 50% het for rock green patternless and so on. They can be bred with any albino burmese morph to make albino hybrid cateaters 100% het for labyrinth, for burmese green and always 50% het for rock green patternless/broad banded/and twin striped. They can also be bred with any rock green patternless morph to make world's first green patternless cateaters 50% het for albino and granite. Or twin striped cateaters. Or broad banded cateaters. It just goes on and on and on. These hold more outright potential than anything I have ever seen in snake morphs, let alone produced. It's just wonderfully mind boggling. Our Website!
----- David Beauchemin
High End Herps.Inc
http://HighEndHerps.com
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