No sir, also I'm aware of what
makes a spotnose a spotnose,
though this was a second-hand
girl from a petstore basically..
being sold as a high-white spot
nose for 70, I didn't even intend
on getting a Spotnose nor my
very first ball at that point but
I fell in love with her she's an
amazing snake, and beautiful
along with a great temperament.

Even if she wasn't a spotnose
I'd be glad to have her she's
just an amazing snake! But I am
quite sure she's a spotnose from
her specific spots right under her
nose, I do too question the lack
of head pattern (the lady there
tried to sell me the snake as a
scaleless head because she had
a bit of last shed's skin on top
making the coloring a little bit
different) but the two spots
right under the nose are the
signs that convince me of her
lineage but if a normal, which
I will test when bred to either
my Pastel Jigsaw or Mojo Spinner,
which I am now glad to announce
I am officially as of today confirmed
to order both of those male snakes!

I'll grab more pictures of my baby
girl today to prove what I mean but
you can see one of her nose spots
vaguely from the first picture. I've
seen breeders' example Spotnoses
from their collections and they don't
even have the signature spot-nose
trait, just often a merging of yellow
around the nose, while my specimen
has completely separate yellow dots
that do not connect to any other
patterns or coloring. Hence Spotnose.

If for some chance I have a normal
that's expressing the spotnose pattern
I would laugh and crap myself a bit
I'm not sure if that's more abnormal
than a spotnose morph having a close
doppelganger normal snake ahahahah.

But she is also brighter and busier
compared to my neighbors old normal..
and she also has patterns that merge,
would love to see more pertaining to
this I would definitely want to let the
owners of the store know to get a hold
of the guy they got the snakes from.

RustlewoodReptiles