Mystic Exotics
New member
While the snake may be small for it's age, it looks healthy. It does not show signs of being underfed (triangular shape).
I disagree with the price of hatchlings being the same as juvenile/adults. In my experience, regardless of species, the older they are, (especially females) the higher the price, because people want something that is ready to breed or closer to ready to breed than a hatchling. Many people do not want to wait for the baby to grow up, before they can breed it.
I have had babies from the same clutch grow at various rates. They can be fed the exact same schedule as siblings, and some grow much faster, some grow slower. I've had some babies that have been more than twice the size difference, at a year old, that have been fed on the same schedule.
Images can show differently, depending on the camera, lighting, and even depending on where the animal is as far as shed schedule.
A freshly shed animal is going to look much better than one that is getting close to starting the shed process.
Sometimes, images just turn out really well, by chance. Of course sellers are going to use a good image of that animal for sale. (I'm not talking about photos that are intentionally altered via photoshop, which does not seem to be the case here).
I understand how things can change, during the time you are talking to a prospective customer. As a seller, it is not uncommon for someone to send several messages inquiring about an animal, and you think they are interested, only to have them just stop talking to you about it. (I'm not saying this is you, but it happens more than some people realize).
During the time of back and forth emails, there could be other people inquiring on the same animal.
I do not consider an animal sold, until payment is made, or a deposit is made for the animal.
Did you have an agreement in writing, before he had males come available and changed it to sell the female as a pair? (Which is common when a seller is male heavy, it is harder to sell lone males).
As mentioned in a previous post, many captive animals are over fed. The snake you purchased looks healthy, albeit smaller than you expected.
I disagree with the price of hatchlings being the same as juvenile/adults. In my experience, regardless of species, the older they are, (especially females) the higher the price, because people want something that is ready to breed or closer to ready to breed than a hatchling. Many people do not want to wait for the baby to grow up, before they can breed it.
I have had babies from the same clutch grow at various rates. They can be fed the exact same schedule as siblings, and some grow much faster, some grow slower. I've had some babies that have been more than twice the size difference, at a year old, that have been fed on the same schedule.
Images can show differently, depending on the camera, lighting, and even depending on where the animal is as far as shed schedule.
A freshly shed animal is going to look much better than one that is getting close to starting the shed process.
Sometimes, images just turn out really well, by chance. Of course sellers are going to use a good image of that animal for sale. (I'm not talking about photos that are intentionally altered via photoshop, which does not seem to be the case here).
I understand how things can change, during the time you are talking to a prospective customer. As a seller, it is not uncommon for someone to send several messages inquiring about an animal, and you think they are interested, only to have them just stop talking to you about it. (I'm not saying this is you, but it happens more than some people realize).
During the time of back and forth emails, there could be other people inquiring on the same animal.
I do not consider an animal sold, until payment is made, or a deposit is made for the animal.
Did you have an agreement in writing, before he had males come available and changed it to sell the female as a pair? (Which is common when a seller is male heavy, it is harder to sell lone males).
As mentioned in a previous post, many captive animals are over fed. The snake you purchased looks healthy, albeit smaller than you expected.
