Some Super Cinnys appear all black, and they are beautiful. Most do brown out after a while though. The babies you see at shows are stunning.
10-22-2012, 04:56 AM
kevinb
Haven't seen to many super blacks this year. Quite sad really.
10-22-2012, 06:34 AM
aalomon
Re: All black?
I think it was last year there were multiple super black clutches where the supers were kinked, or died in egg. ill try to look for the posts.
10-22-2012, 07:52 AM
Mike41793
Re: All black?
Quote:
Originally Posted by aalomon
I think it was last year there were multiple super black clutches where the supers were kinked, or died in egg. ill try to look for the posts.
Yea i remember hearing that too.
10-22-2012, 07:53 AM
Gloryhound
We produced 3 super cinny/Black pastels this year. We like the cross between the two the best as it seems to have less issues than a solid black to black or cinny to cinny. One of ours has a small kink, but the other 2 look good. Another issue we have found though is even a small kink that goes un-noticed as a hatchling can become very noticeable as an adult. For this reason we really don't like selling them on-line and prefer in person, that way the buyer can fully check them out and say good to go when they walk away. Not that most kinks are detrimental to the overall health of the animal, our holdback male super cinny/black has a couple of small kinks and he eats and produces waste just fine. Also he produces perfectly healthy cinnamon pastels and black pastels.
10-22-2012, 08:01 AM
Orenshi
I heard super cinnamon/super black pastels (even black pastel x cinnamon) can also have "duck bills"