Calico
A calico ball python is an incomplete dominant morph that creates irregular white or pale blushing along the sides, breaking up the normal dark pattern and giving the snake a washed, high-contrast look. Expression varies widely. Some calicos show modest side whitening, while others produce large pale patches, especially when paired with sugar, pastel, yellow belly, or darker pattern genes. The name refers to a pattern effect rather than a tidy, uniform color.
Care is unchanged from other ball pythons, but selection for calico projects is both visual and genetic. Breeders usually evaluate side coverage, contrast, and how the trait behaves with other genes. Buyers should not assume every calico will develop the same amount of white, and hatchling photos may not capture the final adult look. Records are useful because several white-sided or blushing traits can resemble one another in mixed-gene animals.
Colors: Albino, Axanthic, Banana, Banana Pied, Black-Eyed Leucistic, Black Pastel, Blue-Eyed Leucistic, Bumblebee, Butter, Calico, Cinnamon, Clown, Coral Glow, Desert Ghost, Enchi, Fire, Freeway, Genetic Stripe, Ghi, Ghost, Het Albino, Het Clown, Het Pied, Highway, High White, Hypo, Ivory, Killer Bee, Lavender Albino, Leopard, Lesser, Mahogany, Mojave, Monsoon, Normal, Orange Dream, Paradox, Pastel, Pastel Clown, Piebald, Pied, Pinstripe, Scaleless Head, Spider, Spotnose, Sunset, Super Pastel, Wild Type, Yellow Belly