Re: What to breed my male to
Some one asked me if I was looking breed long term, I guess meaning put a clown to him, but im looking short term getting a bee.
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Re: What to breed my male to
They said it was long term because clown is recessive. Therefore, you would need to get a visual clown female, breed her to your male, hope you hit a Mojave harlequin desert het clown male (about a 12.5% chance ; the whole clutch would be 100% het clown so at least there's that), raise him, then breed him back to his clown mom and have a 6.25% chance at hitting the quad gene; half that, assuming you want it to breed, because it would have to be male.
OR you could breed a bumblebee and add pastel and spider to the mix without having to breed back generations. You'd have 32 different resulting offspring, including a five-year that I do not believe has been done before. Not bad.
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Re: What to breed my male to
Thank you so much for the detail on that, this is always something ive wanted to do. Id probably want to breed him with something not to say easier but since I honestly dont know about the differ morphs id prob end up giving away the one I was supposed to keep on accident.
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Re: What to breed my male to
No problem. Browse around world of ball pythons for a while, if you haven't. There are plenty of gorgeous potential morphs to pair with your boy to make gorgeous offspring, and the genetics wizard on there can help with odds of different offspring.
I saw a pic of him in another thread--he's quite the looker; that back stripe is wicked! I personally vote cinnamon something--maybe cinnamon enchi? The cinnamon enchi desert (cinnamon tiger) is epic looking. Cinnamon Mojave (savannah) is one of my favorite morphs. But that's my personal preferences, and really you should choose based on your own likes. :3
Not sure if it was mentioned, but just in case it wasn't and you didn't know, do NOT hold back any female offspring with desert in them with the intent to breed her! The desert ball so far has not been able to successfully reproduce as a female, and adding genes hasn't changed that fact. They seem to have problems with their oviduct , although, I do not believe any cause has been proven definitively as of yet. Just that the females either slug out or actually die from trying to pass eggs.
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