Funny thing is I don't remember ever doing any inbreeding myself (except 1 time), even the pairs of same morph that I have bought before from Scott were always from different females (with the exception of the double het snow red-sideds that produced the first snow). Last several years all of my breedings have been from completely different morphs crossed to each other. Even my checkereds are from different sources. This year I breed 23 females and none of the breeding were even remotely related, completely outcrossed, with the exception of my het green axanthic females (mother was wild caught completely unrelated to wild caught green axanthic father) that were bred back to the original wild caught green axanthic male only in an attempt to prove out a new morph gene, which sometimes that is necessary to initially prove out. I think one of the biggest factor in captive breeding is that the snakes have ZERO choices that they can make as to their real-time environment. Certainly captive conditions are not a one size fits all as these snakes are from different locales and latitudes, not to mention they are all individuals. In the wild they can move if they aren't where they want to be. When people talk like they have it all figured out, it just demonstrates to me how little they know about what they don't know.