Snakesitter
07-03-13, 02:03 PM
This week Living Gems gives a 21-month update on its 2011 holdbacks. From that season, we kept back four babies, two males (Everest and Kilimanjaro) and two females (Heliodor and Morganite). We will profile two per week over the next two weeks. This is part two of the series.
Morganite
Born in September 2011, Morganite was ranked only a touch below her two just-profiled siblings Heliodor and Everest. Here she is in a preshed shot shortly after her birth in September 2011:
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7205/6865289329_4f9d1b09f1_z.jpg
From that, she too blossomed into a stunner. Here she is in a one-year shot in September 2012:
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8034/8056111370_1415e1715b_z.jpg
She has thankfully held her own, and in a surprise reversal now stands a touch above her sister. Here she is as of her most recent photo session in March 2013:
Outside
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8548/8752602128_a9da3a3801_z.jpg
Inside
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2890/8751483003_a81a774bdd_z.jpg
Morganite currently weighs 514 grams, and is now feasting on small rats every other week. I look forward to her development over the next year, and maintaining her as a next-generation Living Gems breeder female.
Kilimanjaro
Born in September 2011, Kilimanjaro was ranked only a touch below his two just-profiled siblings Heliodor and Everest. Here he is in a preshed shot shortly after his birth in September 2011:
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7062/6874150537_892a68229c_z.jpg
From that, he surprised me by deepening and developing his background color. Here he is in a one-year shot in September 2012:
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8456/8056116284_291619972e_z.jpg
He has developed into a potential anchor male on the deep red side (clearer in the inside shot). Here he is as of his most recent photo session in April 2013 (one month behind his siblings, who all shed in March):
Outside
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3693/8751502979_82ccfff152_z.jpg
Inside
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3779/8752627174_d5825507ac_z.jpg
Kilimanjaro currently weighs 532 grams, and is now feasting on small rats every other week. I look forward to his development over the next year, and seeing if he can indeed fill that anchor slot as a next-generation Living Gems breeder male.
Thank you for reading,
Morganite
Born in September 2011, Morganite was ranked only a touch below her two just-profiled siblings Heliodor and Everest. Here she is in a preshed shot shortly after her birth in September 2011:
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7205/6865289329_4f9d1b09f1_z.jpg
From that, she too blossomed into a stunner. Here she is in a one-year shot in September 2012:
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8034/8056111370_1415e1715b_z.jpg
She has thankfully held her own, and in a surprise reversal now stands a touch above her sister. Here she is as of her most recent photo session in March 2013:
Outside
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8548/8752602128_a9da3a3801_z.jpg
Inside
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2890/8751483003_a81a774bdd_z.jpg
Morganite currently weighs 514 grams, and is now feasting on small rats every other week. I look forward to her development over the next year, and maintaining her as a next-generation Living Gems breeder female.
Kilimanjaro
Born in September 2011, Kilimanjaro was ranked only a touch below his two just-profiled siblings Heliodor and Everest. Here he is in a preshed shot shortly after his birth in September 2011:
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7062/6874150537_892a68229c_z.jpg
From that, he surprised me by deepening and developing his background color. Here he is in a one-year shot in September 2012:
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8456/8056116284_291619972e_z.jpg
He has developed into a potential anchor male on the deep red side (clearer in the inside shot). Here he is as of his most recent photo session in April 2013 (one month behind his siblings, who all shed in March):
Outside
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3693/8751502979_82ccfff152_z.jpg
Inside
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3779/8752627174_d5825507ac_z.jpg
Kilimanjaro currently weighs 532 grams, and is now feasting on small rats every other week. I look forward to his development over the next year, and seeing if he can indeed fill that anchor slot as a next-generation Living Gems breeder male.
Thank you for reading,