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Oh my!! That is an amazing morph! It looks as if someone rubbed off most of the pattern and color Beautiful.
1.0 '12 Irian Jaya Carpet Python
0.1 '09 Normal BP
1.0 '07 Normal BP
1.0 '08 Pinstripe BP
0.0.1 Nelson's Milk Snake
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0.2 Horses (Egyptian Arabian & Tennessee Walker)
2.2 Dogs
1.1 Cats

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Re: Fader Pastel Butter
 Originally Posted by paul begg
Thanks for the replies guys. She is the result of a butterpin to LTC female pastel. We had no idea that she was hiding something  This year we bred a killerbee and a lemonblast to her so hopefully we'll see what a super pastel fader will look like!
Cheers
Paul
That about answers my question then! ... Partially 
What I was referring to on NERD's site is the description of this animal:
http://newenglandreptile.com/cart/ba...ale-8-10f.html
In it, they say that she should be bred to a fader male to bring out her full potential ... But if the gene is simple dominant (not incomplete dom, recessive or "cumulative"), if she does carry the fader gene, breeding her to a lesser or any other morph that "uncovers" the fader should be sufficient. If she doesn't carry it, then breeding her to a fader male will be no different than breeding any other pastel to a fader male.
Looking through the World of BPs morph list that contain "fader," I feel like I can strongly see the influence of the gene in some of them, and others I just don't see it ... Maybe I just don't have the "eye."
As I said in my first post, your female is the most striking example of "fader" gene influence I've ever seen!
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Re: Fader Pastel Butter
 Originally Posted by Serpent_Nirvana
That about answers my question then! ... Partially
What I was referring to on NERD's site is the description of this animal:
http://newenglandreptile.com/cart/ba...ale-8-10f.html
In it, they say that she should be bred to a fader male to bring out her full potential ... But if the gene is simple dominant (not incomplete dom, recessive or "cumulative"), if she does carry the fader gene, breeding her to a lesser or any other morph that "uncovers" the fader should be sufficient. If she doesn't carry it, then breeding her to a fader male will be no different than breeding any other pastel to a fader male.
Looking through the World of BPs morph list that contain "fader," I feel like I can strongly see the influence of the gene in some of them, and others I just don't see it ... Maybe I just don't have the "eye."
As I said in my first post, your female is the most striking example of "fader" gene influence I've ever seen!
Kevin may suspect to be co-dom/incomplete dom, I don't think enough breeding have been done to really figure it out, to me it doesn't even look like its been isolated from the pastel gene (I may be wrong) so who knows. I have also seen some "nothing specical" faders and then there is stuff like the OP's animal. Possible super fader? Should ask kevin some questions about what he has figured out. at the rate hes producing them it doesn't appear to be recessive.
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Re: Fader Pastel Butter
That snake is just freakin gorgeous! I love it!
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