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View Full Version : Bucket O' babies!!! :)


Jendee
04-16-11, 06:21 PM
Here is some of my 2010's its amazing to see the sie differences in all the yearlings lol was a "full" cleaning day so Id thought Id share with ya guys the fun part...bucket O' babies lol there is 10 of them in this tub..

http://i251.photobucket.com/albums/gg283/cpblsoup/2011-04-1618-50-22510.jpg

http://i251.photobucket.com/albums/gg283/cpblsoup/2011-04-1618-58-17833.jpg

http://i251.photobucket.com/albums/gg283/cpblsoup/2011-04-1618-58-35061.jpg

http://i251.photobucket.com/albums/gg283/cpblsoup/2011-04-1618-58-24934.jpg

enjoy!! :)

infernalis
04-16-11, 06:31 PM
How much do the babies usually sell for?

stephanbakir
04-16-11, 06:48 PM
Great lookin boas, i hope to try my hand at breeding them in the future :)

Jendee
04-16-11, 07:13 PM
Lets see the 2 hypo het vpis $1500, the 3 het leopards.$300-400, the sunglow junlge $700, the arab het albino $500, the hypo motley $400, het bwc $2000, the sharp albino $600 :) but I bought all these for breeding projects they were not bred here :)

infernalis
04-16-11, 07:18 PM
Silly me, I assumed they were produced by you..

Jendee
04-17-11, 06:55 AM
some day soon I will be creating that much variety!! ;) its very exciting watching these guys grow up!!

infernalis
04-17-11, 07:31 AM
some day soon I will be creating that much variety!! ;) its very exciting watching these guys grow up!!


I can't think of a reptile I have ever seen yet that was not exciting to raise from a baby on up to adulthood.

When your babies start making babies. it's even more exciting.

It's funny, we want our human children to stay little forever, and our pets don't seem to grow up fast enough.

blindfireak40
04-17-11, 08:19 AM
Probably has something to do with the fact that most parents don't have eugenics projects set up for their children once they hit sexual maturity :D

And those are absolutely beautiful, Jen! Makes me want one, unfortunately, I'm headed to a school where I'm going to have to fight just to have my corn in the dorms. I don't think a potentially 7-foot exotic would fly lol

shaunyboy
04-17-11, 10:44 AM
Probably has something to do with the fact that most parents don't have eugenics projects set up for their children once they hit sexual maturity :D

And those are absolutely beautiful, Jen! Makes me want one, unfortunately, I'm headed to a school where I'm going to have to fight just to have my corn in the dorms. I don't think a potentially 7-foot exotic would fly lol


you could ask if your allowed to put carpets in your dorm then when they find out it's not the cloth variety just try your best to look innocent and confused ;)

stephanbakir
04-17-11, 12:29 PM
A friend tried it and had 24 hours to remove them or get kicked out, it was a yellow annie though.

blindfireak40
04-17-11, 09:40 PM
I like the idea, Shaun, I like it a lot hahaha

They allow freshwater turtles, so they really have no leg to stand on in terms of corns...I could understand a larger exotic, but such a small, innocuous little snake??

stephanbakir
04-17-11, 10:08 PM
I'd talk to the person in charge directly and explain it beforehand. If you sound like you know what your doing i doubt they will say no.

blindfireak40
04-17-11, 11:04 PM
My thoughts exactly...especially when I explain that a snake represents less noise, a non-existent spill hazard, and a much smaller disease hazard

stephanbakir
04-18-11, 07:38 AM
Snakes do present potential hazards though lol.
My bp would sit on the shoe rack next to the couch and soak in the sun on days when it was cold outside, my sisters friend came in with her hamster and didn't see the snake! It ripped it out of her hand and that was it lol =/

Last time we saw her.

Lankyrob
04-18-11, 10:09 AM
Snakes do present potential hazards though lol.
My bp would sit on the shoe rack next to the couch and soak in the sun on days when it was cold outside, my sisters friend came in with her hamster and didn't see the snake! It ripped it out of her hand and that was it lol =/

Last time we saw her.

Tho if the snake is kept in its viv and supervised when out for handling then there is very little risk.

blindfireak40
04-25-11, 11:23 AM
Exactly. And Vermicelli wouldn't know what to do with something alive. The closest he's ever gotten to striking at food was trying to swallow the mouse while I still had it by the scruff in the tweezers.

I may actually board him at a friend's house just off campus, if he can convince his grandad. It'd make things sooo much simpler.