Awesome surprise! The first keeper is amazing. I’d guess BH YB BP Mojave (leo) ghost, and the last one has pin stripe. I just looked up Black Pastel Mojave leopard Blackhead and Justin has one lol.
@@olympianexoticsthe person recording lmao. But nah good video man I’m gonna use this technique today. I have a couple black belt cichlids that are tearin everyone up in my 125 because it turns out they wanna mate…. Again.
Thank you for this video Jon. I’ve tried doing this but never got results. The parts never pop out, so I obviously, I’m doing something wrong despite all the practice and advice from “Pro breeders”🤨. I did it the way your video suggested and… “Badda -Boom!!!” I got results!!!!!🤙🏼🤜🏼🤛🏼💪🏼 Thanx again brother for your refined education on Ball Pythons!!! See you in Tampa soon🤙🏼
Love the vid! My Eastern Hercules beetle loves all kinds of fruit, not just banana. Her fave seems to be watermelon, but she also likes oranges, kiwi, and applesauce. Not so much regular apples, though.
@@olympianexotics where in Florida is the breeder you mentioned, and do you know if they currently have males available? I'm hoping Herculina will lay eggs when I get the flake soil I ordered in, but if not, I want a back up option
how about green apples or strawberries? im thinking of getting a hercules beetle and i was wondering what kinds of fruit they eat and how often you should feed them!
@user-jo9em4kt3h I feed mine every night, though that's probably more than is really necessary. Also, I really recommend Komodo bug jelly cups instead of real fruit. It's much less messy, less likely to mold, doesn't attract fruit flies, is full of protein and other vitamins to help them live longer, and a cup of it keeps much better, as well.
if you actually sexed them i might consider scooping them. i know its hard but people trying to get high end morphs want to know what they are getting.
I do not sex them anymore because I have had too many "breeders" buy them then try to probe them and hurt the snake in the process and I'm not willing to take back animals that have been injured by incompetent keepers
here in Namibia/South Africa we only have 3 species of house snake; olive-, brown- & bug eyed house snake, respectively. I've never heard of the rest mentioned in this clip. Are they bred in captivation for different colors? Just curious if the U.S. also have indigenous house snakes? The most common & widespread house snake we have are brown house snakes. Enjoyed the information, didn't know how many species/genus there were!
I just put a deposit on a super banana, enchi, black pastel, calico, yellow belly, pinstripe. Male. I can't wait to see what he gives me this year lol. Will have lots of banana combos.