H ey I want to know the results from that breeding. I saw pictures about 2 months ago I suppose of a tiny little t boa breeding a big dark gorgeously striped central american what were the results? Let me know! Dont know whos pics they were Thanks!
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H ey I want to know the results from that breeding. I saw pictures about 2 months ago I suppose of a tiny little t boa breeding a big dark gorgeously striped central american what were the results? Let me know! Dont know whos pics they were Thanks!
my Central American Motley female being bred by Jeremy Stone’s T positive albino Central American male. All Slugs 
Sucks, but you can't win them all. She gave birth for me the past 2 years in a row proving her genetics, but I think three years in a row was a little much to ask. She's doing fine right now, and will be on vacation till at least 2005. No matter though...her daughter is about ready to go...and they look almost identical.
Thanks for the kind words on my female! I appreciate it!
-Alex-
BoaRepublic.com

Check out the daughter as a baby....
Just wondering what the size of each of those are... That male 'T' looks tiny next to her!
Thanks,
Eric
The female is maybe....6 feet? She's not as thick and bulky as a Columbian though. The male is tiny tiny...Jeremy says the size in his post below I think....
WOW i knew a smaller male could breed a large female... LMAO but that picture just cleared it up for me
>>my Central American Motley female being bred by Jeremy Stone’s T positive albino Central American male. All Slugs
>>Sucks, but you can't win them all. She gave birth for me the past 2 years in a row proving her genetics, but I think three years in a row was a little much to ask. She's doing fine right now, and will be on vacation till at least 2005. No matter though...her daughter is about ready to go...and they look almost identical.
>>Thanks for the kind words on my female! I appreciate it!
>>
>>-Alex-
>>BoaRepublic.com
>>
>>Check out the daughter as a baby....
I have a 2 yr male (hog tho) and I kept thinking to myself,
no way an 18 month old male could breed, they are way too small.
I guess not. lol
>>my Central American Motley female being bred by Jeremy Stone’s T positive albino Central American male. All Slugs
>>Sucks, but you can't win them all. She gave birth for me the past 2 years in a row proving her genetics, but I think three years in a row was a little much to ask. She's doing fine right now, and will be on vacation till at least 2005. No matter though...her daughter is about ready to go...and they look almost identical.
>>Thanks for the kind words on my female! I appreciate it!
>>
>>-Alex-
>>BoaRepublic.com
>>
>>Check out the daughter as a baby....
-----
JMHO, FWIW, YMMV.
Actually the male was 18 months and only 29 inches. I was SHOCKED watching him try to breed, and he was VERY aggressive. He actually wasn't too young. As he was breeding Alex's female, he was also breeding another Central American Female which gave a Viable litter of babies, and so we had the first ever Het for T poss CA albino Boas. I gave him a rest for about a month after breeding the two females, and he was soo anxious so I put him with a 3rd. He bred and bred and bred that female and she is gravid now and is HUGE. I have used the Sonogram on her and know she has at least 14 to 16 babies in her, so he did the job again. This was a HUGE shock. He is about the size of a Medium Corn snake. Goes to show you that they really don't have to be that big. He is eating now getting ready for the 2004 season. He isnt' growing much though. I think he will always be small. Take Care, Jeremy Stone
Aren't you afraid that the bigger female will hurt him (or possibly suffocate him)? Just wondering.
- Eric
Actually that is a good question. I never worried about that. The females he was breeding look big in the picture just because he is soo small. The females really aren't that big, they are just big Compared to him. The largest female only weighed 9 pounds. My biggest scare was alarming the female while they were breeding and having her rip out his hemipene. That has happened to me in the Ball pythons. OUCH!!!!! But, the thought of smashing never was a scare. You would be supprised how much they can handle. Take Care, Jeremy Stone
.
n/p
>>Actually the male was 18 months and only 29 inches. I was SHOCKED watching him try to breed, and he was VERY aggressive. He actually wasn't too young. As he was breeding Alex's female, he was also breeding another Central American Female which gave a Viable litter of babies, and so we had the first ever Het for T poss CA albino Boas. I gave him a rest for about a month after breeding the two females, and he was soo anxious so I put him with a 3rd. He bred and bred and bred that female and she is gravid now and is HUGE. I have used the Sonogram on her and know she has at least 14 to 16 babies in her, so he did the job again. This was a HUGE shock. He is about the size of a Medium Corn snake. Goes to show you that they really don't have to be that big. He is eating now getting ready for the 2004 season. He isnt' growing much though. I think he will always be small. Take Care, Jeremy Stone
>>
-----
JMHO, FWIW, YMMV.
np
LMAO !!! I appreciate the Nicaraguan boas more and more each day. Beside their smaller size, which makes keeping them so much easier, they just seem to offer everything the larger boas have without the downside. The different morphs are even comparable to their Colombian counterparts. I wish I could fast forward to breeding the T 's with some of the morphs that are available. I'd bet the T Nicaraguans will have as much an impact in the boa world as the T ball pythons have in producing new morphs that so far have only been imagined!!!
or is that the little snakey that could?
i think I can
i think I can
i think I can
i think I can
N/p
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