I'm curious to hear how other people's Corgis play with their doggy friends, especially bigger dogs.
Jack loves dogs. He's really good with them, too. He is (usually) polite with the ancient ones, gentle with the tiny ones, and will actually lie down and wait for the timid ones to approach first. He immediately backs off when another dog gives him a little lip or a hard stare, and has the good sense to approach an unfamiliar group of more than two dogs in a submissive posture, with ears back and body slightly lowered, and a bit of a smile.
But when he plays with big bouncy dogs, oh my! He really seems to rule the roost. I used to assume he was naturally submissive, based on the way he greets strangers and strange dogs, but now I'm not so sure. I'm wondering if his submissiveness was just a carry-over of puppy behavior; he's just recently turned two, and while I do not really think of him as dominant, his play behavior has me wondering.
He always liked to run other dogs in circles; I guess that's the herding thing. He would leap at their outside shoulder and nip a bit to keep them moving in a big circle. But he soon found that very few dogs just like to run non-stop like that, and he also has a few doggy friends that are way fast and he can't keep up. He still likes to run, but what he really likes is to wrestle.
He seems to have discovered that his low center-of gravity is an advantage. He has discovered the great joy of rolling his playmates onto their backs. He especially likes to do this to young, bouncy dogs. He's done it four times to four different dogs just in the last month or so. It's clearly play, the other dog is obviously loving every minute of it, and there is much mutual face-kissing as well. However, I have also seen the other dog (the flipped one) nuzzle and lick under my dog's chin and mouth in what I always understood to be a gesture of subordination. Then of course they both get up and the game begins again.
Just curious: do other people's Corgis seem to dominate when they are playing with big dogs? It's just funny to see my Corgi standing over a 75-pound lab whose butt he just kicked. And I've never once seen another dog roll over my dog, except for one boxer puppy when Jack was only a few months old.