We just brought home Sokka from you guys from the Fort Worth Reptilian Expo! We love him! He is such a curious little guy and seems so comfortable in my hand! I believe he is toffee het toxic? Do you happen to know who his parents are?
Hey, Andi! He is a Toffee het Toxic and his dad is actually Lightning and Butterscotch! Lightning is the pretty white noodle we have on our morph guide as well as the famous little baby from one of our first videos :)
Thank you! Yes, Quasi is one of our special boys. He was born from a malformed egg that was triple the size of a normal egg. He's going to be used in future studies to try and prove not all kinks are genetic and a detriment to quality of life.
We haven't noticed albinos acting any differently from non-albinos, but there are a few similar colored hoggies that don't have red eyes. You can look into toffeebellys, which hard more of a dark brown/Ruby colored eye, Hypo is often a golden brown/orange color, some pistachios can be very orange, and some Caramels might also have darker eyes (but some so have soft red eyes). Hope this helps!
The axanthic morph is my favorite. I’m not normally a fan of morphs, for my own taste, until I saw the axthanic hognoses. I have a one year old boy named Calcifer. My first ever owned by me snake. Also, I was told by a breeder that some morphs are just genetically incompatible and it leads to problems in the snakes. And I’m seeing that it seems to be in combo with the toffee belly. Do you think there’s any truth to that? I saw a toffee belly that was het for a few things he had this weird neurological condition that reminded me of wobble seen in spider ball pythons.
I don't know enough about all of the genetic interactions between different morphs, but I think they usually mean when you pair 2 genes that do the opposite things (like a T+ albino and a T- albino), but there is still a bit of noticeable difference between the combo and them alone on their own. I think that most issues aren't usually related to morphs, but related to inbreeding over many, many generations. You can breed selectively to improve the bloodlines by outcrossing (breeding to other snakes with different genes) every few years.
You are not wrong! Quasi was born from a malformed egg, triple the size of a normal egg, so he had developmental problems. He is still loved and cherished and gets weekly stretches to help him feel better. Special-needs snakes can still make great pets.
Quasi was not a breeder, he was one of our ambassadors for pet-only hognoses, also used to showcase why kinked snakes should not be bred. He unfortunately passed last year, at around 5 years old, but lived a good live in a bioactive enclosure for the large majority of it until we had to keep a closer eye on him and do our best to make him comfortable towards the end.
@@SnakefulGracethat’s a good use of an otherwise beautiful snake. Pet-only ambassador animals have such an important place as an educational tool. Happy to see he lived well, and with purpose.
Thank you for the feedback! We are definitely working on it. We like filming outdoors but are trying to figure out how to make the wind less of an issue. It's definitely on our list!
That really helped me understand morphs! Great visual demo!
Thank you! I am so happy that it helped!
OH MY GOSH. Not Hordak. That's freaking amazing. I love that show so so so much
And Adora!!!!! Stooooop 😍
It is an amaaaazing show!
Good video
Thank you!
Great video and LOVE the thumbnail!! Can’t wait to get my baby from you :)
Glad that you enjoyed the video! We are looking forward to shipping her out to her new home with you!
I absolutely love snow hoggies. It's so nice to see your babies doing well
Thanks, Morgan! It's very awesome to see them growing nice and big. Adora has gotten even bigger since this video.
We just brought home Sokka from you guys from the Fort Worth Reptilian Expo! We love him! He is such a curious little guy and seems so comfortable in my hand! I believe he is toffee het toxic? Do you happen to know who his parents are?
Hey, Andi! He is a Toffee het Toxic and his dad is actually Lightning and Butterscotch! Lightning is the pretty white noodle we have on our morph guide as well as the famous little baby from one of our first videos :)
My rainbow boa is also named Adora! :)
Great video!!
It's a great name !
Nice video, your snakes are so lovely. I noticed the toffee belly has a lump on his neck/upper torso, I hope he's doing well.
Thank you! Yes, Quasi is one of our special boys. He was born from a malformed egg that was triple the size of a normal egg. He's going to be used in future studies to try and prove not all kinks are genetic and a detriment to quality of life.
Is there an orange hognose without being an albino, or at least not having the red eyes so that they're not...afraid of the light? Please
We haven't noticed albinos acting any differently from non-albinos, but there are a few similar colored hoggies that don't have red eyes.
You can look into toffeebellys, which hard more of a dark brown/Ruby colored eye, Hypo is often a golden brown/orange color, some pistachios can be very orange, and some Caramels might also have darker eyes (but some so have soft red eyes).
Hope this helps!
The axanthic morph is my favorite. I’m not normally a fan of morphs, for my own taste, until I saw the axthanic hognoses. I have a one year old boy named Calcifer. My first ever owned by me snake.
Also, I was told by a breeder that some morphs are just genetically incompatible and it leads to problems in the snakes. And I’m seeing that it seems to be in combo with the toffee belly. Do you think there’s any truth to that? I saw a toffee belly that was het for a few things he had this weird neurological condition that reminded me of wobble seen in spider ball pythons.
I don't know enough about all of the genetic interactions between different morphs, but I think they usually mean when you pair 2 genes that do the opposite things (like a T+ albino and a T- albino), but there is still a bit of noticeable difference between the combo and them alone on their own. I think that most issues aren't usually related to morphs, but related to inbreeding over many, many generations. You can breed selectively to improve the bloodlines by outcrossing (breeding to other snakes with different genes) every few years.
I think your super conda has a kink in the spine near the neck/head area.
You are not wrong! Quasi was born from a malformed egg, triple the size of a normal egg, so he had developmental problems. He is still loved and cherished and gets weekly stretches to help him feel better. Special-needs snakes can still make great pets.
I'm glad he has a good home! :)
@@ashleydobbs9877 Awww, thank you! He is a great educational snake :)
Thank you for a fun video! What do you get when you mix Evan's hypo and axanthic?
Ghost morph is axanthic and dutch/evans hypo.
You are absolutely correct! We actually plan on working with the Ghost morph in the future.
It makes the Ghost morph, another gorgeous white snake.
Love Axanthic morphs, but I hope that Toffee Superconda isn't a breeder. Huge kink just past its head.
Quasi was not a breeder, he was one of our ambassadors for pet-only hognoses, also used to showcase why kinked snakes should not be bred.
He unfortunately passed last year, at around 5 years old, but lived a good live in a bioactive enclosure for the large majority of it until we had to keep a closer eye on him and do our best to make him comfortable towards the end.
@@SnakefulGracethat’s a good use of an otherwise beautiful snake. Pet-only ambassador animals have such an important place as an educational tool. Happy to see he lived well, and with purpose.
ur vids are rly good but pls improve ur quallity, the bad quallity of sound and video makes it hard to watch
Thank you for the feedback! We are definitely working on it. We like filming outdoors but are trying to figure out how to make the wind less of an issue. It's definitely on our list!