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Re: Question for the breeders. "Undesirables"?
 Originally Posted by treaux
You don't have to produce normals if you don't want to. However, this means you need a higher initial investment in multi-gene (or visual recessive) snakes that will yield more valuable and easily sellable offspring.
I am in the same boat as you and don't want to deal with normals. However, I am not planning on breeding to make money, so I can take my time and produce just a small amount of desirable snakes.
Well me too. I love the hobby and can't wait for the thrill of my babies making babies right in front of me and knowing that I helped to do it. But at the same time, I do hope to earn at least enough money eventually that pays for my own hobby. .. and I plan on working UP to the multi gene. But for now I'm just gonna work w my butter, Mojave, Pastel Enchi and Bumblebee... there will be a few multi genes in there I guess. But those should definitely create some good offspring!
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0.1 Mojave
1.0 Butter
1.0 Pastel Enchi
0.1 Bumblebee
0.1 Orange Dream Yellowbelly
0.1 Leopard
0.1 Firefly
1.0 Hypo Brooks King
1.0 Kenyan Sand Boa
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Registered User
Before breeding I usually think about if I am willing to keep the snakes no one wants. I also choose Normals that are beautiful to begin with--or snakes I like the pattern of before I breed. Select cool looking normals. (Bryan Gundie also argued this in one of his videos. That the snakes you select matter.)
I tend NOT to rock bottom the normals because my aim is to find permanent homes where the person will be good to the snake, not where I get the most cash. There are threads in this forum about how many people mistreat snakes after sale and I see my primary job is to minimize this problem from the point of sale, whether the snake is a normal or not. I try my best to informall of my sellers the time and effort involved in keeping a ball python. I've refused sales because they want the snake NOW, but don't have the tank set up and ready to go. Or they want the snake, but have no previous experience. This is something I do that I don't trust my pet store will do for me. (and they often cramp them in small cages they don't belong in.)
I think breeders should be worried about the life of the snake rather than how "wanted" it is or not. They still are animals someone can love. I have to admit I love my normal a little more than my morphs. 'cause she's one awesome looking normal.
My normal occasionally produces with the pastel these o-rings along the dorsal on my normals. The females especially sell really quickly with that mutation.
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Registered User
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Re: Question for the breeders. "Undesirables"?
Why did she die??
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0.1 Mojave
1.0 Butter
1.0 Pastel Enchi
0.1 Bumblebee
0.1 Orange Dream Yellowbelly
0.1 Leopard
0.1 Firefly
1.0 Hypo Brooks King
1.0 Kenyan Sand Boa
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Re: Question for the breeders. "Undesirables"?
And yes, when I look at normals, I think about all of the local PetCos to be honest. Their normals always look terrible, and I'd love to give them well started healthy snakes to sell.. but then I realize it's probably their fault for not maintaining proper husbandry.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
0.1 Mojave
1.0 Butter
1.0 Pastel Enchi
0.1 Bumblebee
0.1 Orange Dream Yellowbelly
0.1 Leopard
0.1 Firefly
1.0 Hypo Brooks King
1.0 Kenyan Sand Boa
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Registered User
Re: Question for the breeders. "Undesirables"?
 Originally Posted by Mangiapane85
Why did she die??
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She died, I think because the house I kept her in was too small... I gave her a larger hide place, but she preferred the smaller one. I threw out that hide after she died. I think it was physical trauma (accidental) from dropping from the hide. I now use: https://www.amazon.com/Tot-Tutors-Pr...s+storage+bins with a hole cut out for the hides. Less cleaning hassle, less danger to the snake. (You have no idea how much I loved her. She had the personality of her mom, loved socializing, but was a pastel with an awesome pattern. I was planning to find her a nice boy lesser given her pattern....)
Anyway, I choose my normals very, very carefully. I'm very picky about what I want out of their pattern color and look. By being that picky and buying only from reputable breeders who care more about the welfare of the snakes, than getting a sale, I ensure that the normals also get sold. I buy snakes from different breeders to minimize incest, but will choose snakes that look similar in order to produce the results I want. I check parentage as well, before purchase to minimize issues.
In another words, I do the footwork and think hard about what I want for the welfare of the snakes, and in doing so can turn around normals fairly quickly for a better price than 20 dollars.
I still would love to see what my normal does to a yellow belly. I'm waiting on my male pastel (under 3 years old, son of the breeding pastel) to safely get up to a weight where he can breed my cinnamon. I'm pretty sure the yellow fade is dominant. So will the pewters also have the yellow fade he has? (Wouldn't that look awesome?)
So yeah, look carefully at the snakes you wish to purchase and purchase along similar patterns.
BTW, I purchased my original normal from lllreptile. While a pet shop, they work with breeders (I asked who their breeder was, etc), have snake first policy, etc. I put a lot of effort into specifying what I wanted and got one gorgeous snake from them. The males I bred to her I purchased from someone who got them from Graziani (I think the sp is correct). The cinnamon I bought is a different line, but since cinnamons came from Graziani, I figure it's better to breed the cinnamon to a male I know isn't a graziani, but at least a few generations removed.
It's totally worth your time to invest in the best looking normals possible--not only their health, but their pattern, background and parentage. Doing this will also minimize birth defects and show off your knowledge of genetics. I also think if you're a lot more selective overall, you could in effect create your own line/set of morphs through careful selection. I would love to develop a complete dorsal o-ring in my normals. Looks like it's mostly dominant.
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