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I agree, put it on and leave it on. He'll get over it eventually.
As far as the leash, I would just let him drag it around the house, and once he's used to that then I would pick up the end and just follow him around for a while.
we had similar problems with the collars/leashes, and I concur with everyone's opinion about leaving them on and letting them drag them.
We watched the Westminster dog show last weekend and the announcers talked about how all of the intelligent dogs in the herding group were "Independent Thinkers"
we LAUGHED and LAUGHED about the characterization of hard-headed, stubborn, know it all herders as "independent thinkers"!
Did you try letting him drag the leash around the house and then picking up the end and following him around? How about putting the leash on and walking around with some super yummy treats, like real chicken or steak. My personal opinion - I'm not a big fan of rolling a dog unless absolutely necessary, and I would not push such a young puppy so hard that he shuts down. You want him to associate the leash with happy things at this age.
And you could still take him to a puppy class. Just tell them when you sign up that you're having major issues with the collar/leash, I'm sure they'll be happy to help you on the first day of class.
I think at this point you have made your pup to think the leash/collar is a bad thing. Never drag them for a "walk". Yes it is a battle of wills but forcing them will get you only 10 steps backward. You have untrain for bad and make it the best thing in the world.
Figure out what is the end all beat all treat for your pup-cheese, greasy hotdogs, etc. Put the collar with leash on him, don't put him on his back in a submissive position-way bad. But get the collar on, then become a Pez dispenser of treats. Good scratches, pets and hugs. Leave the collar and leash on and walk away. At any point that you have recognition of you and not the "evil" collar-reward. For now, no treats if he's chewing, eating or attempting to kill him self with the collar/leash. Only when quiet and ignoring it. And it make take hours. You have to outlast the pup. And for now-no good treats or even treats at all, unless the collar is on. At no point acknowledge the bad behavior with the collar on, ignore it.
It's going to take some time to untrain the bad. As for going outside, get a very light cotton line and tie it to a snap that you can attach to his collar. Make sure it's 10 -15' long. Pick up puppy, take outside, set on the group, walk away holding the long lead. Let him figure out that he can't go goofing off when asked to do his business outside. Ask him to "go potty" and immediately upon releaving himself, go to him(not bring him to you) say "good potty"(I know that sounds hoaky) and bring out those really good treats. Pick up pup, go inside.
Changing of collars might work, but your best bet for the long haul is just a simple leather or nylon buckle collar. Tight enough that it can't slip over the head, but loose enough that you can fit one - two fingers under it.
Good luck!
Hi Ashley, would you mind having a 3rd person filming you while you put on the leash / collar / and walk him? just let the camera run, it'll give us an idea what you're experiencing.
There is hope, your corgi is a young pup, it will take sometime, just like human teenagers your corgi will go through the same. Corgis are very smart, they are ranked at 11 on the intelligence scale, they think independently and will not blindly follow command like a border collie. Some corgis are very hard-headed and usually not recommended for inexperienced owners.
I understand you have a lot on your plate as a stay at home mom, take a deep breath, enroll your corgi for an obedience class, spend the 15 mins a day, keep the learning sessions short and fun. Remember he is a young pup, with a little patience, he'll become your loyal friend.
If he doesn't like the tightness around his neck all the time you could try a nylon martingale collar. They sit pretty loose around the neck when not in use, and then tighten up when the dog pulls against the leash. They can't back out of them either.
I've gotten mine from this seller on etsy, she put lighter hardware on it for my puppy and was happy to accommodate a certain size.
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