Having some first hand experience with Spiders and the spinning I'll going my input.

1) Any breeder should disclose this to all buyers ahead of time and let them know the degree of wobble each animal has.
This is difficult because what I consider a slight wobble you might think is a train wreck. So you demand that breeders disclose to what degree they wobble is difficult. Also I have seen animals that when startled or exposed to intense sudden bright lights as babies exhibit severe wobble symptoms but when calmly handled show no signs at all. So the degree can be environmentally invoked.


2) My bumble bee, which I now call bumblehead, is a knock dead gorgeous snake. I figure she is similar to my wife, beautiful, but not the sharpest tool in the shed. If have been happily married to my wife of 18 years, I will be happy with my bumblehead.
This is key. To see that despite his differance you still enjoy him means you got you you expected in a Ball Python Morph.


3) My friend has a down syndrome child and she is the sweetest kid on earth, unlike my pain in the ass 15 year old. My bumblehead has similar qualities to a my friends down syndrome kid; not that sharp, but absolutely a sweet snake. In the short time I had her, she never rolls in a ball, comes out of the cage without fear, and has this goofy look in the eyes like she knows she is a moron but is still happy.
I Love this connection. Children with down syndrome are "all there" they just process their environment differently. Spinner Spiders are the exact same way. They eat, shed, drink, poop, thermo-regulate, breath, pee. This is why I don't think its a "Neurological" issue but rather a motor function one. If it was "Brain Damage" then you see other issues with muscle control in other parts of the body, eyes, mouth, bowls, tongue. But we don't it only crops up on locomotive functions much like a Palsy of some sort.

4) Snakes are not that smart anyway. So your ball pythons are dumb!, mine is dumber!! whats the difference?

So for all those out there with wobblers, feel blessed. My wobbler is only a juvenile, but I won't be dissapointed if she does not grow out of it.

Gary
Gary yours isn't dumb. If it eats, sleep, drinks, poops, pees, sheds then is a healthy living Ball Python, it just gets around different.