Quote Originally Posted by LizardPants View Post
Maybe so, but not all morphs have neurological disorders.
That we know of, don't get me wrong I understand your point but most morphs are genetically compromised. Breeding back is not the way to good genetics period. There are so many inheritable traits that are completely ignored temperament is genetically traceable do you see anyone breeding a calm easy going snake to another calm easy going snake rather than the flighty high strung snakes?

So you won't support spiders how about poor feeders and nervous animals too, your statements have been very aggressive that is fine no problem from me but where does it end. OK no spiders, I get it. oh but this line of ___ is poor feeders them too? There is much more to genetics than a wobbles. I almost agree with you, I love my spider, he has very little wobble. But doing it again I might have gone pinstripe. That is my choice I don't place that on anyone else. You are, so where does it stop any genetic flaw... albinos are light sensitive... Leucistic is missing key Chromatephores that makes it prone to UV damage. That also is a flaw. What you have started and by your logic we'd have Mojave, Chocolates, Cinnamons, reduced, stripes, and normals. That is about it, they have occurred naturally and have come in in numbers over the years and are not traced back to one or two genetic odd balls. All spiders are related somewhere down the line, I hope that someone will eventually be able to breed it out to some extent but it is a deep imperative as all spiders have the same trait. So I put it to you, give up all morphs but for a very few that are essentially variations on normal? Or keep the morphs and accept that some have genetic issues that go along with it. My issues are not that a spider has a wobble, but that to what extent is made aware before purchase. I was told very accurately what and how much of a wobble there was before I bought the animal, that is fair.