Ashton has just started competing in AKC agility and we do not run him in Preferred. He is a little over 2 years old, in great shape, very athletic and has never had issues with jumping at his measured height class of 12 inches. Different people we have talked to have different opinions on the subject. The long backs/short legs of a corgi = back issues so corgis shouldn't run agility at all (or only Preferred) to those who think if you are careful and train properly they can make their way to a MACH.
What I'd like to know is how other agility corgi owners felt? Do you think corgis should only run in Preferred?
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Hi Gail. If we ever get to trials, I plan on running Jack at 12". He sometimes brings down the lower jumps because he gets lazy. He's a tall Corgi, over 13" at the shoulder.
The breeder we got him from has bred at least one MACH, with a couple others on the way up. My girl Maddie's one daughter (I'm not the one who bred her! We got her after she "retired") ran 12" at the PWCCA National Specialty, and she was far from the only one (though not that many qualified at that height).
I think if you have a tiny little 10" Corgi then you might want to stay at 8". If your dog jumps well within himself then I would run the higher fences. What I would NOT do is train regularly at the higher height. I'd train as much as possible at 4" and just run the higher fences in training often enough for conditioning and to get the dog used to the height. Running in a trial at a higher height isn't going to hurt him, but jumping them over and over again while training might.
I dunno, I've also heard that your Corgi should not jump out of cars, off the couch, etc. The breeders I know (and I know a couple big-time ones--- specialty winners) all let their dogs jump on and off the couch, just not the bed. Sometimes I think they are more likely to get hurt if you coddle them.
I've trained Jack at 4" and ran him at 12" at a games event (like a mini-trial with timed courses, but just for fun). He paid so much more attention at the higher jumps. His enthusiasm was greater too.
P.S. I just got the winter edition of the PWCCA quarterly. They have the National Specialty results in there, and there are plenty of MACH-titled dogs.
The granddam (mother's mother) of the BOB winner at the National has both her conformation CH and her MACH, as well as some low-level herding and tracking titles. So certainly it can be done with the right dog.
Its a good question. I'm not trialing yet but we are jumping at 12 at home. Sherman is about 14in tall. He takes the jumps easily. I worry about the pounding, but he is so hyper, he is jumping off all kinds of things at home. The 12in jumps are smaller than the couch he launches off of. Sometimes I wonder if climbing the A frame is harder on them then the jumps.
I think I am just going to make a greater effort at improving his muscle tone to protect his joints. I plan on lots of swimming this summer. I also have him on a joint supplement and adequan injections to keep him going.
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