![]() The morph’s name is inspired by the Mojave Desert. The Mojave morph is a co-dominant, single-gene base morph developed in 2000 by Dan and Collette Sutherland of The Snake Keeper, Inc., based in Utah. Should show you the difference between the two, but look for bright gold coloring and a head marking. If he is a normal, he is by far the prettiest one I've ever seen. Mojave Ball Python Evolution and History. This is a pic of a Sulfur (Sulfur and Fire are both Het Black Eyed Lucies) and normal. Without further delay, here are the pictures. On the other thread, it was suggested that he may be orange dream? I'm not great at IDing subtle morphs. Also, all of his brighter pattern seems to have a border where it is lighter/brighter before it transitions to the black also something I haven't seen before that seems unusual. His eyes are also brighter than I've seen on a normal, sort of a dark forest green which is different to normals I've seen. He has some flaming up his sides and very subtle blushing all over his back. The fire ball python is one of the original ball python. The REASON theyre known as Ball pythons is. Each baby fire ball python for sale is feeding weekly on both live and frozen-thawed hopper mice. This results in the snake having a warmer, more fiery coloration overall, though the difference is. The ONLY harm a Ball python could cause a dog or cat would be a bite, and it would do that only if threatened. It has reddish-brown and golden tones, in contrast to the darker, more cool browns and yellows of standard, wild-type ball pythons. Comparing him to the pictures is as close as I have ever gotten on coloring on a snake, so they're pretty true-to-life. The fire ball python is a color morph, meaning the trait primarily affects the snake’s coloration and patterning. ![]() These pictures were taken this morning near a door with natural light from a cloudy day. He does not have any interesting belly pattern, looks about like a normal there, so definitely not yellowbelly. Most of this blushing and flaming was much less visible before his shed. He has less of the banding pattern, but quite a bit of orange and some dark gold-ish blushing in his very dark brown/black. Looking at him, he could be a low-quality enchi, but maybe something else. The ball python (Python regius), also called the royal python, is a python species native to West and Central Africa, where it lives in grasslands. BALL PYTHONS: 1.0 Pied/Clark, 1.0 Pastel Vanilla Super Stripe/Sunny, 0.1 Dragon Fly/Buffy, 0.1 Pastel Vanilla Yellow Belly/Cher, 0.1 BEL (Mojave Lesser)/Arya, 0.0.1 Normal/Norm, 0.1 Cinnamon Enchi/Peaches, 1.0 Cinnamon Calico/Yoshi, 0. They’re docile and calm creatures and grow to a maximum of 5 feet, which is big enough to be impressive but not unmanageable. Prior owner didn't say where they got him, so I'm not sure how trustworthy the info is. One of the 2 is a male who I was told is an enchi. I have another thread going about my 2 rescue ball pythons where I've posted these pictures. I'm starting this as a bit of a spin-off.
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