I see a normal (definitely not a calico). Hatchling normals can even be brighter than that. This is one I produced form mojave x normal. She was significantly brighter than her siblings, but still a normal.
In your opinion please tell me what kind of male would you get for a female who is 100% het hypo (her dad is butter champange and her mom cinnamon het hypo)?
In your opinion please tell me what kind of male would you get for a female who is 100% het hypo (her dad is butter champange and her mom cinnamon het hypo)?
If those are the parents she isn't a 100% het hypo. She would only be a 50% possible het.
If those are the parents she isn't a 100% het hypo. She would only be a 50% possible het.
X2 one of the parents needs to be a visual Hypo for the babies to be 100% het. If the Cinnamon was not a visual, she is only het for hypo. Therefore, her offspring are only possible het aka 50% het hypo
X2 one of the parents needs to be a visual Hypo for the babies to be 100% het. If the Cinnamon was not a visual, she is only het for hypo. Therefore, her offspring are only possible het aka 50% het hypo
I think the dad was visual and the mom seemed normal..
aalomon, what did you breed her too? A Mojave? That is insane! I've been dieing to get some hands on experience to see what all polygenic traits will get passed onto Normals (and morphs) when produced from various other gened animals. A cook book of sorts. Your normal has obvious color influence from the Mojave! I plan on some experiments to produce Normals with specific variance, we'll see how it goes in the years and years down the road but I'm extremely hopeful. Pictures of Normals like yours actually do nothing more than reinforce my desire to start my polygenic programs. I can't wait to see baby pics and know what you paired her with. Honestly if I had a Normal like either one of these I would hope it was a male and I don't care about money and breeding stacked genes so he would get paired to several single gene females.