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Intermont

camby May 05, 2010 08:07 PM

This is one of my female intermonts. She is an adult at approximately 30-32 inches. Very under appreciated animals in my opinion.

dc

Replies (7)

dustyrhoads May 05, 2010 10:31 PM

>>This is one of my female intermonts. She is an adult at approximately 30-32 inches. Very under appreciated animals in my opinion.
>>
>>dc
>>

Nice one! One of the handsomest I've seen.

mattkau May 06, 2010 12:07 AM

Nice one. May I ask where you got that one. I have a pair from KJ Lodrigue.

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Matt Kauffman

DMong May 06, 2010 02:34 PM

Nice looking specimen!

~Doug
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"a snake in the grass is a GOOD thing"

my website -serpentinespecialties.webs.com

Godfrey May 06, 2010 06:36 PM

Here is an '09 from my Garfield County, Colorado locality line and an '05 female from the KJUN line. The latter is now lighter than this photo. She is in blue now, so I dug up an old photo taken by Troy Hibbitts These are neat snakes. They are often called dwarf Emory's because of their small size. I have also seen them called Colorado spotted rat snakes. Their clutches are small, but the hatchlings are large. They are considerably larger than most corns when they hatch.

monklet May 07, 2010 12:54 PM

Love that second, faded one...is that a natural morph?
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Have a nice day

See all my snakes at SerpenTrack.com

Godfrey May 07, 2010 04:10 PM

It's not a morph. It's just a locality Emory's rat snake. Some Intermontanes are lighter than others. This one is an exceptional animal when it comes to color. It is from the same bloodline as the ones earlier in the post that came from KJUN.

ratsnakehaven Jun 01, 2010 04:20 PM

I love the "locality" Emory's ratsnakes. Intermontana is a much overlooked form, imho, too. There even seems to be a lot of variety just among the various intermontana. Thanks for the pics...

Terry

>>Here is an '09 from my Garfield County, Colorado locality line and an '05 female from the KJUN line. The latter is now lighter than this photo. She is in blue now, so I dug up an old photo taken by Troy Hibbitts These are neat snakes. They are often called dwarf Emory's because of their small size. I have also seen them called Colorado spotted rat snakes. Their clutches are small, but the hatchlings are large. They are considerably larger than most corns when they hatch.
>>
>>
>>

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