Burmese Pythons

Caramel Albino Type I

This is the original Caramel Albino ever produced in captivity. We were fortunate enough to hatch him out on May 15th, 2008. He is much different in appearance than the two we hatched out later that same year from our other heterozygous female. From the day he hatched till now he has gone through four major color changes. He hatched out with LSU colors, in that he was a lavender and golden rod color, much different than his currant appearance. We have reason to believe that he is actually a double visual T+/T- Albino. More information will come as this line is further developed. Imagine this color mutation crossed into Greens, Labyrinths, and Granites! This is the first new recessive mutation in Burmese Pythons since 2003. It should also be pointed out that this is not the same lineage as the T+ Burmese that was developed in Europe.

Caramel Albino Type II

2008 was a very good year for us! We didn’t just get one clutch of Caramel Burms, but instead we hatched out two! Our second clutch hatched in September of the same year! We were fortunate enough to get two Caramels in this clutch! Unfortunately the second male of the year passed after a few minutes of being out of the egg. The female that also came from this clutch has been much different in color than the male hatched in May. She has never gone through any major color changes. She looks the same today as she did the day she hatched, maybe a little brighter in color.

Granite

The Granite was originally produced in 1999 by Bob Clark. There has been recent debate as to if this is a recessive or dominant gene. We believe that it is a dominant form of a Jigsaw Burmese. When two Jigsaws are bred you get Granites. All heterozygous Granite Burmese are Jigsaw in appearance. This morph has since been introduced into Albinos, Greens, Labyrinths, Hypomelanistics, and the European T+ Albino line.

Labyrinth

The first captive bred Labyrinths were hatched out in 1989 by Bob Clark. They have continued to hold their value over all other morphs of their generation. They have never really been produced in large numbers like other morphs. They generally always sell out quickly. They have been crossed into Greens, Granites, Albinos, and eventually Caramel Albinos.

Albino

The Albino Burmese is responsible for getting investment quality snakes off the ground. This was the very first color mutation of any snake reproduced in captivity. They were originally produced by Bob Clark in 1996. This mutation has been introduced into most every morph available in the Burmese world.