Monsoon
Monsoon is a recessive ball python morph, within Python regius, named for its heavy broken pattern and fine speckling. Visual monsoons usually show scattered dark flecks, disrupted side markings, and a busy dorsal pattern that differs sharply from the cleaner alien-head blotches of a normal ball python. Animals carrying one copy of the gene, commonly called het monsoons, do not reliably show the trait. Because the gene changes pattern more than basic color, it can be combined with morphs such as albino, axanthic, banana, or clown to produce very different-looking snakes.
Monsoons are kept like other captive-bred ball pythons, with secure housing, steady heat gradients, moderate humidity, and appropriately sized rodents. The practical difference is in breeding and buying. A visual monsoon project requires both parents to contribute the recessive gene, so pairing records and clear identification of het animals matter. Good photos of the head, sides, and full body help document development as the snake ages. For pet keepers, feeding history, body condition, and calm handling response are more important than rarity.
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