My 16-week-old Luna can... sit, down, stay (also stay with a treat a few inches in front of her face), shake, roll over, crawl, "bang bang", stay standing on all four, jump up on hind legs, and for the most part, come when called (okay, maybe not for the most part, it's more like 50/50 lol). For some reason, I'm having a major problem teaching her to wait with a treat on the end of her nose. I've seen it done before and I got her to do it a few times in the beginning, though she could never catch it once I said "okay." It'd just fall off her nose and she'd go pick it up. That was all fine, but NOW she's refusing to even attempt the trick. The moment I tell her to sit and stay (which she does) and she sees the treat coming toward her, she either turns her head away, walks away, lies down, or worst of all (and most recently), raises her lip at me (all bark and no bite). Once I've reached that point, she won't even sit for me anymore.
I'm wondering (and this is just me possibly humanizing her) if the act of putting a treat so close to her and making her wait for it makes her feel any way humiliated or degraded? Because I must admit, it's a bit pathetic watching a dog wait with a treat on its nose. They always look so sad. The breeder told me corgis are different from other breeds because they can easily get their feelings hurt. Not sure if that's true or not since we discipline her fairly well and she always quickly forgives us with kisses. Anyone else have any trouble teaching their dogs a certain trick? Any advice you can give me on why she's reacting this way and what I can do to resolve it? Thanks!