Eric Adrignola
Avid Member
I have females only available now (could have sold more males than I hatched!).
They're over 2 months old, and are about to hit their growth spurt. I do NOT overfeed my animals in order to get them "out the door" asap, so they're not going to be ready to breed until around 12 months, 9 at the earliest.
This makes the animals significantly less prone to Metabolic Bone Disease and developmental disorders.
I'm a private breeder, so I do not produce many clutches - usually one or two a year. This is a great opportunity to get a healthy animal of unparalleled quality. I put a lot of effort into selectively breeding my calyptratus. Large size, bright, balanced coloration with minimal browns or maroons, all are qualities I look for in breeders.
The father is a really fantastic breeder, and has been with me a long time. I've not seen a veiled with such bright colors - in good light, the orange on his body appears entirely artificial (pictures do not do him justice, especially when he was in sunlight). The mother comes from a very nice, colorful bloodline, even larger than the father (who is 17").
Another plus - all the offspring from this paring in the past had perfect barring - no broken yellow bars at all - and that was the father's only flaw.
Female veileds: $75.00 each, plus shipping via UPS next day air.
If you have any questions, send me an email.
Eric A
- and just to clarify - he's NOT showing his "fired up" colorsi n any of these photos. These are his normal colors. As long as he's not miserable(in a new home), he looks like this all the time. When he gets fired up, he's almost all orange, with black highlights, and blue spots - really scary looking, but his normal colors are far nicer, in my opinion.
They're over 2 months old, and are about to hit their growth spurt. I do NOT overfeed my animals in order to get them "out the door" asap, so they're not going to be ready to breed until around 12 months, 9 at the earliest.
This makes the animals significantly less prone to Metabolic Bone Disease and developmental disorders.
I'm a private breeder, so I do not produce many clutches - usually one or two a year. This is a great opportunity to get a healthy animal of unparalleled quality. I put a lot of effort into selectively breeding my calyptratus. Large size, bright, balanced coloration with minimal browns or maroons, all are qualities I look for in breeders.
The father is a really fantastic breeder, and has been with me a long time. I've not seen a veiled with such bright colors - in good light, the orange on his body appears entirely artificial (pictures do not do him justice, especially when he was in sunlight). The mother comes from a very nice, colorful bloodline, even larger than the father (who is 17").
Another plus - all the offspring from this paring in the past had perfect barring - no broken yellow bars at all - and that was the father's only flaw.
Female veileds: $75.00 each, plus shipping via UPS next day air.
If you have any questions, send me an email.
Eric A
- and just to clarify - he's NOT showing his "fired up" colorsi n any of these photos. These are his normal colors. As long as he's not miserable(in a new home), he looks like this all the time. When he gets fired up, he's almost all orange, with black highlights, and blue spots - really scary looking, but his normal colors are far nicer, in my opinion.