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High red parietalis young!

SjoerdVanVeen Jun 27, 2009 08:55 AM

4th april

3 weeks ago

Yesterday (26-6-2009)


I cant wait to see how their colors will develop! See my other topic for the low red young, but it should be pretty damn nice!
the endresult is 58 young of which 2 are euthanised (Very small young, weighing 0.7 gram)
56 alive and healthy young that already ate. I'm happy
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www.crazyreptiles.eu
Thamnophis; radix, atratus, sirtalis, parietalis,tetrataenia, cyrtopsis, pickeringii
Nephrurus; wheeleri, milli. Oedura; monillis. Rhacodactylus; ciliatus. Eurydactylodes; agricolae. Diplodactylus; tesselatus

Replies (2)

brhaco Jun 29, 2009 04:53 PM

Wow-quite a litter! And your adults are stunning. It's ironic how much more advanced you Europeans are when it comes to Thamnophis. Luckily I see signs that garters are starting to get the credit they deserve over here as well...
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Brad Chambers
WWW.HCU-TX.ORG

The Avalanche has already started-it is too late for the pebbles to vote....

SjoerdVanVeen Jul 01, 2009 07:00 AM

Cheers Mate,
I don't really think we are way more advanced when it comes to Thamnophis (we're still importing all morphs from the US), but I know some of us are working on line bred traits to improve color in the snakes.
As far as I know, there are still no european produced morphs.
This was my first year with this pairing, but I'm sure I'll hold on to a few of them. Some are really, really light in person. I've got a small project planned for them
More info about that once I've selected the high red holdbacks. The low reds are already mind blowing at 7 weeks...
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www.crazyreptiles.eu
Thamnophis; radix, atratus, sirtalis, parietalis,tetrataenia, cyrtopsis, pickeringii
Nephrurus; wheeleri, milli. Oedura; monillis. Rhacodactylus; ciliatus. Eurydactylodes; agricolae. Diplodactylus; tesselatus

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