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I'm about to purchase my first chameleon (from screameleons) which will be a 50/50 mix between an ambilobe and a nosy be. Does anybody know of any pros or cons of purchasing a mixed cham? I can't wait to see what an adult of this mix will turn out to look like
I hope you will post some pictures in the future! Also, just to put it out there, Screameleons is GREAT, but personally I have experienced FANTASTIC support and amazing colors from KammerFlage Kreations (Chameleonsonly.com).
I have a morph as well from kammers, hes wonderful. congrats
your chameleon is awesome!!!Ambi-nosy is one of the most popular hybrids. Here's a couple pictures of one of mine (at rest - he fires up very orange and golden)
In my opinion, there are no serious "cons" to crosses. But they do tend to fetch a little less money than "pure" locals - which only matters if you are trying to breed for $$
A Cross that people on this forum are fond of is McLovin, owned by Socalison. See his pictures here:
https://www.chameleonforums.com/mclovin-muffin-lovin-22661/
and Here: https://www.chameleonforums.com/mclovin-sgt-pepper-baby-quad-27213/
I was between Screameleons and Kammerflage, I finally decided on screameleons only because I've seen them at shows and they are closer so the chameleon will spend less time in transit. I also put up a picture they sent me of my soon to be cham. I am still new at this website and I'm not sure how to show the picture off yet.
The only con is that you can't really breed him in he future and sell the babies, because it's a mess.
That is so not true. BTW how'd you figure that.
I'm not against breeding crosses at all, but here are a few reasons why I wouldn't do it for the purpose of selling (I might hatch out 5-6 eggs and keep all offspring, for example):
1. You can't sell them for as much, so you lose even more money in breeding and raising hatchlings.
2. You have a harder time selling them, especially if you're an unknown breeder, because there is less demand for mixes.
3. You will have even less demand for the cross females, so you might be stuck with quite a few of them.
4. You risk people getting your females and then irresponsibly selling them off as something else, thereby making a mess in other breeding programs without meaning too directly.
your chameleon is awesome!!!