Posted by:
DMong
at Sat Aug 18 01:38:55 2012 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by DMong ]
Sure thing!. Well, my L.t.abnorma are only 2011 animals, so it will be a good while until they are bred, but I will certainly keep you updated on them. Shoot me a PM if you like.
Glad you also like those killer true-blue central highlands Guatemalan abnorma. They are simply as genuine and authentic as they come, and I even got the ultimate best pair of the clutch (yuk-yuk)..
Very nice Colombian milks you produced there! Yes, they are definitely intergrade micropholis x andesiana due to the very high red body ring (RBR) counts (per andesiana). The lower ring-count individuals do key-out and would pass as very high RBR count micropholis, as was Scott Ballard's pair (17 RBR as I recall) back when they were first offered, but there are MANY others that the ring-counts are just simply off the charts too high for keying-out as micropholis (10 to 18 RBR, average mean 13.8), and are well into the 20's (andesiana: 24-37, average mean 30.7). I also know the entire story/history on them and all the people involved. They are very nice South American milks, but definitely andesiana x micropholis. Just for giggles, It would be interesting to see what the dorsal scale row counts at mid-body are on all of yours as well(andesiana 19 scale rows, micropholis usually 21 scale rows).
Shoot me a PM if you'd like......
cheers, ~Doug
----- "a snake in the grass is a GOOD thing"
serpentinespecialties.webs.com
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