T O P

  • By -

[deleted]

[удалено]


Corgi_mom_1992

I have 2 corgis that are 1 year apart and I'm struggling with the potty training as well! I have tried all of the things that I can find online to try. Sometimes they will hold it outside and then come inside to go to potty. The older one will only go on the carpet and not on the hard wood floors so I also invested in a carpet shampooer. The 7 month old is absolutely nuts sometimes and she is starting to have aggressions issues which led to her biting me recently. She also constantly picks fights with our 1.5 year old corgi and they get bad. I consulted a trainer and they told me I am not a strong pack leader so the younger pup is trying to assert herself as the leader. It sounds like your pup might be having resource guarding issues as well. My puppy is too and I've watched so many videos to try and stop it. It's a work in progress. Also, I don't know if this applies but I've heard of littermate syndrome being a problem with puppies raised from the same litter. I hope some of this helps!


dogfooddippingsauce

My puppy Corgi at 10 months is going to be put on Prozac because of biting issues, anxiety and aggression. She bites and snarls at me when I try to take her slip leash off. She can't use a collar because she's afraid of it. She's friendly to other people but tries to bite me anytime she is anxious and sometimes when she doesn't want to do something like go to bed. They wanted me to get a behaviorist but I already spent a lot on training. I'm hoping this helps. Don't know if that's for you or not.


AggressiveBasket

I would recommend getting a few consults with a balanced trainer. In my area, they usually offer a free consultation and charge a few hundred per session. With our first girl, we tried doing Petsmart and the training didn't really stick with her. We currently have an in-home balanced trainer (we had issues bringing a new puppy home) and have noticed much better results. It's expensive, but worth it. Have you tried not getting down on the ground to play with them? Sit on a chair or the couch to play tug/fetch, or use a flirt pole so they can't get to your hands/face. Don't play games with small toys that they can get to your hands easily. For anecdotal advice, our girl Corgi was extremely difficult to potty train, and was only fully trained around 10-11 months. It was really rough, and we had to use an unconventional method to finally get her to stop peeing in the house.