There are many different views on this disorder, some people don't mind it, some can't stand it, some think it's cute. Some people go as far as to totally refuse to take in the spider gene because of it.
During some previous research I found out there have also been cases of wobblehead in Womas and another gene that I can't recall at the moment.
What has sparked my interest in starting this thread is that I have noticed an alarming increase in the frequency and severity of wobble/corkscrewing an adult Honey Bee male of mine. I first noticed it was getting more intense two sheds ago, I walked in the room one day and there was a thumping and thrashing coming from his tub that you would have thought there were two males in there duking it out! I slide his tub out to find out what all the commotion was about and he had shed but had some stuck shed on his head and dangling from his neck. He was doing laps around his tub like Mario Andrette, in very fast snapping bursts just like combative behavior .... I passed it off as him trying to get the stuck shed off as it was driving him crazy. This has since happened twice, once while he was paired with a female I had paired him with successfully three times in the weeks prior, and another time when he was in his own tub. (Neither of those two times were in unison with a shed as the first) ... Also just observing him I have noticed a vastly increased amount of corkscrewing and restlessness than what I have seen from him in the past year.
I started this thread in hopes of shared stories of this disorder, discussion on what some of the rest of you may have thru your own personal experience or have found in your own research on Wobblehead and corkscrewing such
as increased frequency as the snake ages, if it has been noticed or noted that certain things such as feeding or breeding or what not seem to trigger a more intense wobble or corkscrewing behavior.
Thanks in advance to any and all that participate.