Here are some pics of my Pewter Boa born in the same litter as my Bloody Salmon. I had never heard of a Pewter Boa but from the first time I laid eyes on this baby in the birthing goo I knew there was something different about it. It had the dark eyes that are characteristic of a Blood Boa, but it did not look like any Blood Boa or Bloody Salmon Boa that I had ever seen. So after making some calls and doing some googling I come to find out that what I had was a Pewter Boa, which is both a Blood Boa and a Type II Anery. So for example, when crossed with any normal boa, the babies produced will all be het Blood and het Type II Anery. Here is where the type II comes in.
At some point in the early history of Ron St. Pierre's El Salvador Blood Boa , a blood boa was crossed with a Type II Anery and some of the babies came out anery. This proved that the type II anerythristic gene was present in that Blood Boa, and therefore can be present in Blood Boas. My hets were acquired from Rich Ihle, who used original Blood Boa stock to breed into his Salmon line to make the Bloody Salmons and ultimately the Bloody Sharp Albino. The Bloody Sunglows are right around the corner!!
So here it is, my first double recessive trait snake.
In these next two pics, you can better see the purpleish hue that this snake has.
At some point in the early history of Ron St. Pierre's El Salvador Blood Boa , a blood boa was crossed with a Type II Anery and some of the babies came out anery. This proved that the type II anerythristic gene was present in that Blood Boa, and therefore can be present in Blood Boas. My hets were acquired from Rich Ihle, who used original Blood Boa stock to breed into his Salmon line to make the Bloody Salmons and ultimately the Bloody Sharp Albino. The Bloody Sunglows are right around the corner!!
So here it is, my first double recessive trait snake.
In these next two pics, you can better see the purpleish hue that this snake has.

