Potus

Victoria

Australia

Profile Information:

About Me:
Hi, I'm a owner of a Pembroke Corgi, named Potus. Myself- well I'm a uni student. Po, as he's known, is my first dog, and thus first Corgi, but we do have a history with Corgis- my great grandfather had one too!
Welsh Corgi Breeder?
No
About My Corgi(s):
I have one male Pembroke Corgi, named Potus (it stands for President of the United States- a long story). He is gorgeous and energetic but a bit mischievous- he is a bit of a Houdini at times, and is a bit naughty- he still hasn't got over the love of biting, despite many attempts to train him out of the behaviour.
I have:
Pembroke

Comment Wall:

  • Wendt Worth Corgi's

  • Geri & Sidney

    Welcome! Potus sounds like a great dog. One day you will have to tell us the story of his name.
  • alli

    welcome................ glad to hear more corgis are invading the parks and beaches of OZ...love the pic of the ball under the lounge....George still tries to fit at 31/2 and there is no way his butt will fit lol
  • Geri & Sidney

    Oh I just saw he has a glorious tail! WooT!
  • Geri & Sidney

    Did you notice Sidney's tail? He's a rebel here in the USA!
  • Carolyn

    Loki loves the water!! It is his favorite thing to do...If I take a bath, he begs to go in too!
  • Edward and Gemima

    Hi Potus we love your name!! We also really love your beautiful fox-like tail!!!!
  • Deb , Gretzky, and Norman

    Hello all,
    I thought I was the only one that loved to sniff those little salty- smelling dog paws! Everyone has always harassed me for doing it. Ha! Love the name Potus.

    I will now have to tell my friend from Australia that we now have Corgi friends that live in Australia!
  • TALLULAH

    Thank you. Potus is very handsome too!! AND I love his name. Give me the short version of how that came about!! ^-^ Eileen
  • Lynn Williamson

    Thankyou for that bit of advice. I am keeping my eyes open everywhere, websites for rescued dogs, breeders websites, papers etc but nothing yet. I hadn't thought to ring any breeders but like the idea of registering for a puppy from an upcoming litter. Whereabouts in Victoria are you??
  • Angela Wiramihardja

    Thanks for welcoming me :) your corgi has a very cute and innocent face!
  • Ein Danger

    the 19th huh? wow, my mum's b-day is the 18th! we're all libras!!!
  • Adrienne

    Happy Belated Birthday Potus!.... from Dash.
  • John Wolff

    Thanks. We're lucky here on the west side of the Cascade mountains; no scorpions or venomous snakes. There are Pacific timber rattlesnakes and scorpions on the dry east side, but only active in the hot summer months.
    We had a visiting teacher from Down Under here on a field trip when a student got bitten on the finger by a small rattler. She took it very, very seriously and I thought she was over-reacting until I remembered that you have much more serious reptiles down there.
    We pay for our benign climate with nearly constant drizzle 8 months a year. Makes me wish *I* had fur.
  • John Wolff

    Oddly, we get the same thing here. It's kind of a Mediterranean climate: steady drizzle for 8 months, then nothing for 4. The Seattle megalopolis has totally outgrown its water supply, so we can't water lawns or anything, and it all gets brown and dry. Now, everything's already getting mildewy again.
  • Mickey

    I was born at the Crown Street Royal Hospital for Women, Surry Hills. My parents separately immigrated to Sydney from Europe in 1945. They met, got married, and then immigrated to the U.S. - San Francisco in late 1957. I went back to Sydney when I turned 25yrs to visit my Godfather and Aunt/Uncle who were living there at the time. I still have a great fondness for Australia - I often wonder what life would've been like had I grown up there. I look forward to sharing corgi stories with you and your precious boy! Sophie was my first dog too. Would love to hear the Potus story...Cheers...
  • Rachel & Goldie

    I live in Victoria too im in the undocked tails group. Without their tails there is less personality. And its cute too its like a little fox tail.
  • Rachel & Goldie

    Hi Im A victorian in Melbourne My little Puppy Goldie Is becoming to get old and we want her to be a mother.......... Now only if its ok with u if your Potus is Male Because He looks like 1 Please comment back and look at Goldie She's older than she looks in the photos i have but plzzzzz comment back and if you want we can sort something out.
    Hopefully they will meet and like eachother

    From Rachel & Goldie
  • Rachel & Goldie

    What a cute dog hope hes a good boy!
  • Buddy & Wynstan

    Just wanted to say thank you very much for the seat harness recommendation. My pup is a bit small for the harness and is a bit confused by it, but I really like how secured he is
  • Rachel & Goldie

    Thanks for the help!( Im only 10) So Mum and i are looking into the vet to help us search or something. The info will come to good use!!!

    Regards, Rachel & Goldie
  • Chloe's parent Liz

    yes they both look comfy on their chairs.
  • Pa'ani

    GREAT NAME! I love it!
  • Lynn Williamson

    I would love the name of the breeder please. Stilll looking for my girl. Thanks. Lynn
  • Patti

    Thanks 4 your comments on the pic - that is the loverly Luna as a pup. As a weird fact, don't know if you follow Sydney Australia's news, but a dear friend of ours - a Jimmy West of Jupiter, FL thru some strange twist of fate was mistaken for a James P West of Sydney - who traveled here for Thanksgiving!!!!!! It's making all the news. Great story tho. Loved your bit about the floors - we call ours "distressed!"
  • Sian Winter

    Heya Potus, thanks for the interest, sorry this is a bit of a book, but he's my boy!

    I call him my Coy-Gi.

    Nibbler was found scavenging in municipal dump in Peace River, Alberta, Canada (google it - there's nothing much further North)  He was prob. just under a year old when he was found and rescued (winter was starting and he was not going to make it through -40 on his own)  He spent 2 months in the pound, and a year and a half in a foster home, being socialized . They were brilliant! I cannot say enough about how fantastic that foster mum was for ol Nibs. Especially since, far as anyone can figure, Nibbler is the result of a corgi-terrier cross meets up with a wild coyote-dog hybrid, so about 3/4 dog and 1/4 coyote.

    Coy-dogs are not usually advisable as pets, much like wolf-dog hybrids their instincts are directly opposed to the needs of a domestic animal. 

    Coy-dogs are not unusual in any isolated area here in the North, most often they hang around aboriginal communities where dogs are let run loose all the time. Opportunist coyote male takes advantage of a domestic dog in heat, and voila: coydog puppies - doesn't usually happen the other way round cause coyotes regularly gang up on and kill/eat domestic dogs. They only call truce when there's a bitch in heat. Other domestic dogs don't usually like having the coy-dogs around, and most hybrids favor the wild side, and they are def. NOT pets. They can't bark, they do high pitched yip-howl combo. When they get a bit bigger - the teenage dog stage - the other dogs will often kill them or drive them out of the area.

    Nibbler is really lucky to have made it at all. 

     

  • Sian Winter

    pt. 2

    Though his face and ears are all corgi, and he has a bit of terrier rough-coat and shaggy mane,  Nibbler has a real coyote look to his legs/body-carriage/tail, his molars are slightly different than a domestic dog, and his canines are way way longer and sharper than you would expect. Startlingly so. He does bark, but it is a higher-pitch than you'd expect from the size of his chest- more of a yip - but he also makes all the other, normal corgi vocalizations, too. He's super -agile : I've found him walking along our 2"wide windowsill - it's 9 feet long - even the cat can't do that - and he's been 6 feet up our tree - bum level with my head- going after a squirrel. He kinda ran at the tree and then humped it to get the little rodent. He hunts like a coyote, too - pounces with his front feet to break the back of the mouse/squirrel, then tosses them in the air like a cat - not grab and shake, like a domestic dog.

    He's the cuddliest kissiest coyote ever, though - super affectionate, LOOOOVES all other dogs and kids, and is very gentle with the cats. My 24 year old moggie runs our house, an he's very respectful of her. He won't even try to eat her food - he steals shamelessly from our younger cat. Squirrels, rabbits and mice however are def. On The Menu. He's a better mouser than any cat I've ever owned.  And he's super smart, and picks up on any training in literally SECONDS. 

    Honestly a perfect dog. I'm so super lucky to have found him. 

    And I get the added bonus of listening to him, on clear nights,  singing back to the wild coyote pack that hunt in the fields near our house. !!!