This depends on how serious the kink is. A large kink in a breed which should have a straight tail may be a disqualifying fault, although some breeds (such as the English Bulldog) are allowed to have kinked tails. Hopefully his good assets will outweigh his fault in the ring. Even if the kink does mean you cannot show your Dog professionally, you can still show him at companion and charity Dog shows.
its not strait because the was its moving or bent you can tell how it feels
Think of what you would do if you had a bad cut on your finger by slamming the door on it. No different for your cat! Get your cat to the vets immediately before infection sets in! but what if you don't have a vet
cedar waxwing
A kink in a cat's tail is usually an indication that it was broken at one time.
Dogs do not need there tails to live, but it would make it very hard for one to lose their tail. A dogs' tail main purpose is to balance the dog. They may having trouble walking...but they would still be alive.
No, a dogs tail is just a continuation of the spine.
they would use there eys and ears and sound to do that
hair on back raised, tail straight in the air, teath may be showing, stiff posture, possible growling.
yes that actually happened to my grandfathers dog and about 3 weeks later its tail grew normally
This is anatomically incorrect, but if you were to arbitrarily rename the tail a "leg", most dogs would have 5 "legs". However, there are dogs with only two or three legs and a tail, so you can't make a blanket statement.
No because it does not have a bone in its tail because that is how it is.
By the way it positions it's body. by snarling (showing its teeth in warning), growling or by wagging its tail. I also had a dog that learned (from humans) to smile when greeting you.