
Corgis are best if you have some room for them to run. They're perfectly happy indoors, but they get fat if they don't get a lot of exercise.
Corgis are best if you have some room for them to run. They're perfectly happy indoors, but they get fat if they don't get a lot of exercise.
Shamelessly stolen from someone earlier in thread.
Corgis are best if you have some room for them to run. They're perfectly happy indoors, but they get fat if they don't get a lot of exercise.
2 Acres dude. And lots of deer to bark at.
They are so adorable, but their weight-to-leg-length ratio means I wouldn't want to own one because I've seen how they can struggle with mobility.
2 Acres dude. And lots of deer to bark at.
Wow, that's perfect. If you get one as a puppy, maybe your older dog might be okay with it?
They are so adorable, but their weight-to-leg-length ratio means I wouldn't want to own one because I've seen how they can struggle with mobility.
Well, it's best not to let them jump up and down from beds and the like... they tend to hurt their knees and backs, because of how they're built. What my sister did for hers, since they share the bed, was to build or buy some steps so they could get up and down without jumping.
What my sister did for hers, since they share the bed, was to build or buy some steps so they could get up and down without jumping.
That's what I have. I got them for like $40 at Bed, Bath and Beyond. (The beyond includes pet stairs apparently)
2 Acres dude. And lots of deer to bark at.Wow, that's perfect. If you get one as a puppy, maybe your older dog might be okay with it?
Not a chance really
I take care of my sister's dogs occasionally on my days off work when her and her husband are both going to be at work for extended times (Office manager and an EMT... can mean a people-less house for a little too long sometimes) and my dog basically retreats into a corner they don't go to very much and gives them a little throaty grumble when they get close to her. She's never snapped or bared her teeth, but she's clearly not happy they're around. When I can get them to go to sleep somewhere else she mellows and goes back to assuming her usual position right in the middle of the floor, but if they're up and about she's back in her little corner. She doesn't really like going outside while they're here either.
Just wouldn't work out with a cool little puppy that's trying to learn to socialize.
Can't.. stop... watching...
I'm impressed by how well the corgi that gets kind of run over manages to not only stay on its feet, but keep running.
They look derpy and useless, but you can kind of see, sometimes, that they were once working dogs.
I'm impressed by how well the corgi that gets kind of run over manages to not only stay on its feet, but keep running.
Love the look that does gives the dark one too. "What the hell, man?"
Malor wrote:What my sister did for hers, since they share the bed, was to build or buy some steps so they could get up and down without jumping.
That's what I have. I got them for like $40 at Bed, Bath and Beyond. (The beyond includes pet stairs apparently)
Failing that, hot tub or spa/pool type steps work really well too. Just crazy glue yoga mat pieces onto the steps for traction (that's what my parents did for our dog because he's older and likes to nap on my parent's bed).
That's mesmerizing.
...from the Executive Producer of 300 and Sucker Punch.
Queue the "This is BISCUIT!" or similar quotes.
To make up for the TWO WEEK'S LACK of awesome corgi stuff, I give you nearly 4 minutes of awesome corgi stuff!
I think this might be photoshopped.
I, for one, welcome our new Corgi overlords!
Those two loops are exceptionally well done. It's very difficult to see the seam in the top one, and I can't see it at all, in the bottom one.
The bottom one loops right as the guy "runs into" the tree on his second go around.
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