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Most common to me would be albino pied .. cheapest would be g stripe ghost probably
1.1 het pied ,1.1 pastel,1. butter, .1 spider , .1 fire ph ghost , .1 pastave
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I would love for someone to point me to all these cheap hypo g stripes. I would love to have one. I have three different visual doubles and several more in the making. I'm pretty sure snow is the cheapest by a bunch. Caramel stuff is probably the second cheapest and that's because the problems with that gene.
"Lucky is the man who never has to confront what he is truly capable of" Unknown
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Re: Whats the most common and most affordable double recessive? And are both the same
 Originally Posted by zues
I would love for someone to point me to all these cheap hypo g stripes. I would love to have one. I have three different visual doubles and several more in the making. I'm pretty sure snow is the cheapest by a bunch. Caramel stuff is probably the second cheapest and that's because the problems with that gene.
That's probably because there is very little demand for them. But with such a rare combo, with the right buyer you may be able to swing a surprising price, but honestly, you can get a Hypo Male and a G Stripe Male for under 200 bucks each. This is a combo of two very low end morphs.
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Re: Whats the most common and most affordable double recessive? And are both the same
 Originally Posted by STjepkes
That's probably because there is very little demand for them. But with such a rare combo, with the right buyer you may be able to swing a surprising price, but honestly, you can get a Hypo Male and a G Stripe Male for under 200 bucks each. This is a combo of two very low end morphs.
not a very good analogy since You can't breed 2 males together!
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Re: Whats the most common and most affordable double recessive? And are both the same
 Originally Posted by coldbloodaddict
not a very good analogy since You can't breed 2 males together!
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If you say so. I'm just pointing out how cheap both of these morphs are. That's what this thread is about, cheapest double recessive. And those are the two cheapest recessives. Why wouldn't something that is going to produce more relatively cheap stuff also be relative cheaper?
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Re: Whats the most common and most affordable double recessive? And are both the same
 Originally Posted by STjepkes
If you say so. I'm just pointing out how cheap both of these morphs are. That's what this thread is about, cheapest double recessive. And those are the two cheapest recessives. Why wouldn't something that is going to produce more relatively cheap stuff also be relative cheaper?
last dbl het gstripe hypo I saw was still 600 dollar for a female, given that was about a year ago but, you can an actual visual snow for that now. Demand is very low for the snow, since it is seen as a dead end project to most. But add enchi or something to it... might have a shot at something other than an all white snake.
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Re: Whats the most common and most affordable double recessive? And are both the same
 Originally Posted by STjepkes
That's probably because there is very little demand for them. But with such a rare combo, with the right buyer you may be able to swing a surprising price, but honestly, you can get a Hypo Male and a G Stripe Male for under 200 bucks each. This is a combo of two very low end morphs.
With double recessives it's not as simple as adding the values of the two genes together. You are completely ignoring the years of time and luck involved in making the double visual. The value in the double recessive animal is hard work it takes to make it. Let's take albino and genetic stripe for example. You could shop around and probably get the pair for 500-600. You buy an albino and g stripe and raise them up for 2-3 years. Then you breed your albino to your g stripe and hope you get a good sex ratio to raise up. Then your raise the females up for 2-3 years to get them to breeding size. At this point you pair your double hets and hope that they both are willing to breed. If you get eggs the first year breeding you are probably getting 5-7 eggs. So now you have 5-7 eggs in your incubator hoping for a baby that you have a 1 in 16 chance of hitting. So statically it could take you three or more clutches to hit it and your female may or may not breed three years in a row. Sure there are quicker way to get here by buying adults or buying double hets up front but those are far more expensive. I think the last time I saw an albino g stripe for sale it was 4000 bucks.

I am breeding these two together next year and going to start all over again shooting for the triple recessive. It's a sickness.
"Lucky is the man who never has to confront what he is truly capable of" Unknown
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Zues...... very well stated. Most people dont think about the time and hairloss involved
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Re: Whats the most common and most affordable double recessive? And are both the same
 Originally Posted by zues
With double recessives it's not as simple as adding the values of the two genes together. You are completely ignoring the years of time and luck involved in making the double visual. The value in the double recessive animal is hard work it takes to make it. Let's take albino and genetic stripe for example. You could shop around and probably get the pair for 500-600. You buy an albino and g stripe and raise them up for 2-3 years. Then you breed your albino to your g stripe and hope you get a good sex ratio to raise up. Then your raise the females up for 2-3 years to get them to breeding size. At this point you pair your double hets and hope that they both are willing to breed. If you get eggs the first year breeding you are probably getting 5-7 eggs. So now you have 5-7 eggs in your incubator hoping for a baby that you have a 1 in 16 chance of hitting. So statically it could take you three or more clutches to hit it and your female may or may not breed three years in a row. Sure there are quicker way to get here by buying adults or buying double hets up front but those are far more expensive. I think the last time I saw an albino g stripe for sale it was 4000 bucks.

I am breeding these two together next year and going to start all over again shooting for the triple recessive. It's a sickness.
I got lucky with my double recessive project. I purchased a hatchling female Pied possible het Hypo and an adult male Pastel Hypo possible het Pied back in 2010. I had 1.0 Pastel het Hypo het Pied, 0.1 Hypo het Pied, 0.1 Pastel Hypo het Pied hatch out in 2012, proving my female to be a Pied het Hypo. And last year I had 0.1 het Hypo het Pied, 0.1 Pastel het Hypo het Pied, 0.1 Hypo het Pied and 1.0 Pastel Hypo het Pied hatch this year. So I don't think my male Pastel Hypo possible het Pied is het for Pied. Even with a female that is homozygus for one recessive morph and het for the other, I am looking at investing about 5 years into this project before I expect to see a double visual. That is a lot of time and effort. I believe that is why all the Hypo Pieds I see for sale are over $4,500. People really tend to forget how long it can take, and I got lucky that I started with a great female.
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Registered User
Albinos are cheap because they were the first morph ever.
Caramels and deserts (I know it's dominant) are going to plummet since there are problems with both genes.
The pied project is in high demand now, so many are working on it. But the price is also going down rapidly as the market is getting flooded and it becomes more common. But they are still pretty pricey.
Clowns and hypos aren't that expensive, though. Hypos aren't that visually impressive so their prices tend to be low.
However, I think the quality of the animal you produce and your pricing depends on how you match up and think of the genetics of your animals. If you pay attention to the normals you plug into your projects, and so on down the line and find similar animals with similar patterns you want to target, then you are more likely to get a visually stunning animal down the line. (Instead of going for just the closest morph--and I've seen people do that too... but results are more consistent if you go with similar animals).
Also, be careful with recessive. =P Scammers exist. (Yeah, I know this sounds like a soap box and a no duh, but I've seen people try to scam on the internet.) Be sure to get it through a well-known breeder or at least demand paperwork. Someone offered a trade of his het clown for a pastel I had and asked for paperwork and he refused. No sale.
Last edited by GoldSheep; 02-01-2014 at 11:23 AM.
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