
This illustrates why I don't remove babies from the cage right away. These babies have very thick umbilical cords. Removing them could easily rupture a blood vessel causing them to bleed to death. That would be a bad thing. I leave them in until they move off on there own. These babies usually survive treating them this way. These two lonely babies are left behind with these yucky slugs till they are ready to move off on their own. All in good time.

There's everybody else over in the corner. These babies are about 36 hours old in these pictures.
Everybody wants to be in the same spot. Here they crowd behind a water bowl their mother pushed a bunch of Aspen into when looking for the perfect spot to have those little gems.

I moved the bowl for a better picture. Aren't they cute!? A Washington Bloodline Female produced these after being bred by a Hypo male.

Look at that one funky Hypo in the front with almost no color whatsoever. Weird.
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