Yes. The King snake will shake it's tail at you, sorta like a rattle snake shakes it's rattler. I am pretty sure it's not like a dog wagging it's tail, saying "hey I'm happy/exited/nervous/.
It is a warning. When the snake shakes its tail it is simply telling you "I'm not in the mood for whatever you're about to do", "so either do it and risk getting bitten, or pooped on, or wait until I am in a better mood, and not shaking my tail at you!"
That's what I've got. If someone else has a better answer, so be it.
To signal distress, the snake can shake its tail rapidly, hissing, or curl up, hiding his head
Shake a Tail Feather was created in 1963.
Hognosed snake, eastern kingsnake, scarlet kingsnake, mole kingsnake.
because they don't have a tail they have a nub
do
Shake the Wii Remote
Ray Charles.
he may be nervous
you grab it by the tail, and shake it like a pompom, like a pompom.
The snake falls into the King snake family. California Kingsnake; Black Kingsnake; Eastern Kingsnake; Common King Snake; Desert Kingsnake; Florida Kingsnake; Black Desert Kingsnake; Speckled Kingsnake Reported from this web site. The Kingsnake received its name because it often eats other snakes. It is famous for eating Rattlesnakes. When a hungry Kingsnake finds a Rattlesnake, it will bite the Rattlesnake behind the head and coil itself around the body. The Kingsnake is nearly immune to Rattlesnake venom and does not worry about being bitten. Like a Boa Constrictor, the Kingsnake tightens the coils around the Rattlesnake and suffocates it. Sometimes the Kingsnake will eat the Rattlesnake before it is dead.
A California kingsnake is a form of non-venomous snake, Latin name Lampropeltis getula californiae.
the tail of a dog helps the dog show you or its neighbor how he feels about an event. example= when you get home the dog will shake its tail.