file:///C:/Documents and Settings/Owner/My Documents/My Pictures/Picture/Picture 377.jpg

Welcome to kingsnake.com's message board system. Here you may share and discuss information with others about your favorite reptile and amphibian related topics such as care and feeding, caging requirements, permits and licenses, and more. Launched in 1997, the kingsnake.com message board system is one of the oldest and largest systems on the internet.
file:///C:/Documents and Settings/Owner/My Documents/My Pictures/Picture/Picture 377.jpg

If you want to post pics here, the easiest thing to do is click on the photo gallery link above and sign up for a free kingsnake photo gallery. If you want to post a single picture, all your kingsnake photo gallery photos will be listed "Select Images from Photo Gallery" that appears bellow the Message box when you're posting.
If you want to post multiple images the easiest thing to do, is open up your photo gallery in another window. Click to open the picture you want to upload and then right click on it (you want to open up the picture so that it is the only thing in the window, if you just click on it while it's on one of the gallery pages, the right address won't come up). Select properties from the dialogue box that comes up. This will give you the Address (URL) for your image; copy this. Then in your message text type the following where ever you want to insert a picture (without the asterisks, I'm just putting them in so the code will show up): [*img*]paste the URL you copied here[*/*img*] This will let you put all the images you want in a single post. You can preview the post to see if it's working.
-Alice
Are these male/female?

That's a beautiful pair you have! Neither of them looks real clear cut in terms of sex, but I'm pretty sure the yellow one is a male (looks like a ~3 year old). I would lean toward female on the gray one. In one of your previous posts, you said that one everted its hemipenes; whichever one did this is defineately a male. Bellow is a picture of a more clear cut pair, Note the much broader head of the male on the left than the female. From my observations, it takes about four years for males to develope heads like this.
-Alice

I think you're right, but when I found the duds a couple weeks ago, I thought maybe they were both females, the other one from the post a while back was one I found lose roming in my den, he was returned to the wild, well my back yard.
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