Re: Is she a Super Pastel?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ian.nesmith
Well I got ahold of him again today and he told me she could possibly be pastel enchi, I'm not quite sure how he's confused or isn't 100%. He also told me that his assistant mistakenly paired her with a Lesser Mojave, and that would potentially explain why she isn't eating, and hasn't shed either.
Seems like he tells you what you want to hear, not someone I would do business with between the "confusion" and other excuses.
Paired or not if he had experience he would actually let you know that it is not unusual for adults especially female to go off feed with their new owners, out of all adult females I have received in the past (loan or purchased) 50% of them stop eating upon arrival and only resume feeding 3 to 9 months later. Adult can take a little longer to adjust. Needless to say I would not pair an animal that is not settle or is not eating for me, that might delay your plan but it is pretty typical when buying larger females.
Re: Is she a Super Pastel?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Deborah
Sorry but I don't see how you can use a killerbee for reference when ask about a super pastel, yes both heads are faded but there is a big difference in the fading between both due to the other gene or lack there of involved. :rolleye2:
When you try to compare you should use similar animals for comparison.
To the OP the patter is reduced however I am not seeing Enchi, as for super pastel here is the issue, without picture of the animal as an hatchling it could be tricky to figure out if you are dealing with a pastel or super, there is a lot of variability in both, I have seen amazing pastel mistaken for supers as adults and I have seen poor example of supers that could easily be mistaken as pastels.
If you bought this animal from a reputable breeder you should not even question the animal on what it is being sold or purchased at.
For education sake, why would you say not enchi? Just curious what it is you see or don't see.
Sent from my Nexus 6 using Tapatalk