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If the road is as quiet as you say, you may want to teach her an auto-look at your face when she sees a car. Start with very high-quality treats and some distance to keep her below threshold. Teach "watch the car, look at mom". If you were on a busy street this would not work, but on a quiet one it may.
Any dog who is a rampant car chaser should be reconditioned, no matter how unlikely they are to get loose, because they WILL get loose at some point. I accidentally trained Jack to stop whenever I drop the leash but I don't really know how I accomplished this.
Worst case scenario, it is one of the few situations I would use an e-collar on if positive-based reconditioning does not work.
I know how you feel. Betty is 11 years old and one would think she should have learned that cars are dangerous. Not so. She will walk right out in front of a car if I let her. We are in a gated apartment community and traffic is somewhat limited, but still there is the occasional idiot who thinks the 10 mph signs mean 40 mph. The pizza delivery drivers are oblivious to traffic laws and speed limits. When I threatened the local pizza shop owner with a lawsuit he had a talk with his drivers and they have slowed down somewhat. Bottom line, we must think and act for our beloved corgis. They are so precious that the thought of losing one to a car is unbearable. We must be the eyes and ears for our kids when they are distracted.
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