What makes a morph a morph?
Confusing title, I know but let me clarify.
I know what a normal, albino, piebald, and leuistic is. I've heard the terms "pastel" and "cinnamon" and "ivory" but I can't look at a ball and know what it is. I looked at a picture of what I thought was a black pastel but it was actually a cinnamon.
My question is, what do I look for to identify the morph of a ball? What characteristics should I be looking for to tell the difference between a pastel and a super pastel? I've found morph lists that have pictures of the listed morph but no description of said morph. I want to get more involved with ball pythons and the community but I don't want to seem like an idiot for not knowing morphs :/
Re: What makes a morph a morph?
Qualifier: You're not going to like this answer. :)
The best way to learn is through experience and doing exactly what you've been doing. There is no super secret comprehensive morph guide that is handed out after a feeder rat sacrifice ceremony or anything like that. It just kinda comes with being involved in the hobby. And, there are so many morphs these days that it's a herculean feat to be able to recognize them all, let alone pick them out when in a combo.
And with Black Pastel and Cinnamon, no one will fault you one iota there. I certainly wouldn't. :)
Re: What makes a morph a morph?
^this here haha there's so many variations of "normal" coloring that has a slight variation in pattern making it something else, I can't identify probably half of what's out there, getting better over the last 8 years but it really is a Herculean task unless you're Kevin McCurley
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