I think what used to be called "green" was compatible with the larger group of hypos (i.e. yellow/orange/butterscotch, etc). But sounds like there might be a new "green" line that isn't?
This is the one and only hypo I've produced. His father's line is from the TSK extreme (via thier hypo mojave line) and his mother from whatever Brian Sharp was selling years ago (currently he lists "butterscotch/yellow"). It was already known extreme was compatible with the larger group but this is an example.
I think what used to be called "green" was compatible with the larger group of hypos (i.e. yellow/orange/butterscotch, etc). But sounds like there might be a new "green" line that isn't?
This is the one and only hypo I've produced. His father's line is from the TSK extreme (via thier hypo mojave line) and his mother from whatever Brian Sharp was selling years ago (currently he lists "butterscotch/yellow"). It was already known extreme was compatible with the larger group but this is an example.
That is unbelievable...just amazing and beautiful...
Michelle
Lets just say it has advanced to ....way too much to list
I used a florescent shop light but with regular bulbs. Just can't get well lit enough without some sort of light closer to the snake than just the overheads.
Needed the cash more than a male so sold him. Sort of had an idea he might turn out to be a nice hypo but don't have any experience owning others to compare him to. I've seen some similar looking older hypos I liked come through a Denver snake store but don't know how typical they where to seeing hypos in general in person. Used to be you would see pictures and could hardly tell they weren’t normals but maybe it's as much our cameras getting better as selective breeding or better lines.
I think she is pretty cool but maybe they took some flack for the "extreme" name?
I searched back on their lineage pages to find her. Looks like she was hatched in 95 and bred to a mojave from 98 listed from the same presumed import source which I THINK is the founding mojave: