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biggest impact

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  • 01-02-2010, 07:26 PM
    Emilio
    biggest impact
    Which one of the base morphs do you believe has done the most to get the ball market where it is today?
  • 01-02-2010, 07:47 PM
    LGL
    Re: biggest impact
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Emilio View Post
    Which one of the base morphs do you believe has done the most to get the ball market where it is today?

    "Where it is today" as in all of the morph/combo variety and people spending hundreds and thousands of dollars on animals? Or do you mean that the market has dropped and prices are much lower than they were a few years back?
  • 01-02-2010, 07:51 PM
    Emilio
    Re: biggest impact
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LGL View Post
    "Where it is today" as in all of the morph/combo variety and people spending hundreds and thousands of dollars on animals? Or do you mean that the market has dropped and prices are much lower than they were a few years back?

    What I'm asking is which one of these do you think has made the average herper or animal lover fall in love with ball pythons? In tern make the hobby grow llike crazy.;)
  • 01-02-2010, 07:55 PM
    LGL
    Re: biggest impact
    Ok. Thanks for the clarification.
  • 01-02-2010, 08:02 PM
    Emilio
    Re: biggest impact
    I voted pied but the other three all have a good argument.

    1.Albino I love them but many species have this mutation.

    2.Spider combo king!! But some will always point to them being special
    thats what I call the spins and wobble. I love spiders!!!

    3. Pastels a hott one can be eye popping, can give the combo king a run for its money.

    Both the Spider and pastel are on my list because of the amazing combo they make.

    Almost forgot to explain why I picked pied. I love how variable they are, I like that no other species has a mutation like it, amazing combos, pieds make the average person say whoa!
  • 01-02-2010, 08:37 PM
    RichsBallPythons
    Re: biggest impact
    The albino ball python is the main reason most herpers began collection them. Back when proven in the 80s and reaching 15-20k a piece they became a major fad that to this day is still going strong.
  • 01-02-2010, 09:23 PM
    hmj75
    Re: biggest impact
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by flameethrower View Post
    The albino ball python is the main reason most herpers began collection them. Back when proven in the 80s and reaching 15-20k a piece they became a major fad that to this day is still going strong.

    I thought the albino was proven in 92?....and were 7500 a piece??..
  • 01-02-2010, 09:24 PM
    hmj75
    Re: biggest impact
    I would say albino.......They have been aroundalmost 20 yrs and still have a decent tag on them...you can never go wrong with recessive
  • 01-02-2010, 09:31 PM
    RichsBallPythons
    Re: biggest impact
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by hmj75 View Post
    I thought the albino was proven in 92?....and were 7500 a piece??..

    According to nerd it says bob clark in 92 but he had them back in the late 80s as well trying to produce more to prove them recessive.

    The price i seen for some of the first ever sold were 15k im sure the price has changed year after year but wont be easy to find a price guide from then.
  • 01-02-2010, 09:34 PM
    hmj75
    Re: biggest impact
    oh ok cause I looked in clark's website and he acquired it in 1989 but didn;t hatch the first albino till 92 when the hets laid eggs...either way the albino is what opened the flood gate in the ball python industry just like the albino burmese did with the large snakes....
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