Hi all,
In recent weeks, we've been seeing some ugly behaviors between our two corgis. They'll be normal, sometimes playing, sometimes not, when out of the blue, they''ll get into a really nasty fight. The only way to break them up is to spray them with water or throw a towel over them because they really get going. I don't know why this is happening - they're 2.5 years old and have never consistently done this kind of thing but they are now.
We were wondering if it could be a jealousy thing? Our female corgi has always been really pushy about getting attention and will run rough-shod over her brother to get it. Could that cause this behavioral change? Is it an escalation of her jealous behavior?
Thanks for any insight you can offer me.
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Are there any chewies or toys nearby that may be sparking the fight? Or maybe attention from you? I would implement NILF (nothing in life is free) if you haven't, just to help solidify that you are in charge here. How much exercise do they get?
Well yes, we play ball sometimes but that isn't always when the fights start. It could be an attention thing, although in my opinion, they get equal amounts. They get lots of exercise actually. My husband walks 'em in the morning, I walk 'em midday and again in the evening so they probably get around 2 hours of exercise a day. I don't know what NILF is. I'll look it up. Thx!
Whenever my two corgis fight, it is almost ALWAYS my female that starts it. Most of the time, the fights start when my male tries to groom her and she doesn't want it. She will go after him while he lays on the floor and cries out to make her stop. I can't help but laugh sometimes since he is twice her size. She will also start fighting if she sees that he is getting something she isn't getting, be it attention, toys, or a treat. I have tried to either give them something each at the same time, or take one or the other in a separate room and do it there. They haven't fought for a while now so hopefully I am doing something right.
Fighting is always a hard thing to deal with, and one thing may work for one dog but not another. I would say to keep an extra eye on her and the next time they fight, watch to see if you can pinpoint who starts it and what may have caused it.
Oh I think you hit it on the head there - it's always the girl. She's the dominant one and whenever we give her brother attention, she'll basically (and literally) stomp all over him to push him aside. We've seen her do that - kind of pick on him, like, pecking at his neck and face sometimes, trying to incite something and we stop it when we see it. Sometimes though, they'll be totally normal and then all of a sudden it's a deathmatch.
I see why we have decided to call female dogs bitches hahaha. I don't know what it is with my female, she seems overly pushy and mean. She listens to me better than my boy does, so I would assume that he is higher up in the pack than she is. I don't know whether she is fighting for a higher position, or she is just crazy. Thankfully it is easy to tell when she is about to fight because her hackles raise sky high. When I see that I remove her away from my boy.
I have a female that will do this and it's at high activity time and when there is something that Livvy thinks "she" should have or control. I faithfully monitor this and only one goes out at a time...doesn't happen often but I know how you feel. Maybe play time has to be seperate? I also crate or put them in seperate rooms when I am gone so they can both have peice and quiet.
Maybe put a leash on her so you can grab her? This works for many different things.
Undesirable behavior can be caused by many things, including undetected illness. No behavior modification program should begin without first taking the dog to a veterinarian for a complete physical examination. While you're there, give your vet a printed copy of this page and ask if it would be an appropriate technique for you to try. The NILIF program is an accepted standard in dog training/behavior but it is not, and is not intended to be, a substitute for an in-person, professional evaluation of your dog's behavior. This technique is intended for dogs in good health and of sound mind and stable temperament.
This is awesome! This addresses every issue we're having with our pups as I see it. Consistency is not something they get and not to throw my husband under the bus here, but he's a big reason why they don't. I work at home and so I'm with the dogs the most. They know they can't get away with certain things when I'm around - they wait to go through the door, they wait for me to throw the ball, they know very well when they do wrong because they've seen the "wrath of mom". :)
My husband though, is very lax with them and lets them do whatever they want, whenever they want. I've tried to get him to understand that responding every time, to their demands is probably causing them confusion and stress but he loves them so much, he can't bring himself to be the boss. I'm going forward this to him and try to discuss seriously again, what we need to do consistently, to make our pups happier. Thanks so much!
It's hard when there's 2 different styles and many time there are:)
My husband and boys allowed our Spaniel to jump on them, in spite of my disapproval, until my husband had back surgery and it suddenly became a very bad thing. Now he doesn't jump on them any more.
I can relate!
I have 2 male corgi's and they did this about 3 or 4 months ago - we never did figure out what was going on but they got into horrible fights for what seemed like nothing - no food was involved, no toys were out etc.... but they fought until blood was drawn and I was unable to get them apart - it was so scary.
Luckily after some time seperated; then reintroduced in a VERY structured setting; with both on leashes they did ok.... for a few hours and again, fighting!
Like I said, we never did find out why they were doing it - - but what I can say is that they stopped.
I hope your 2 do also; I have been in your position and it literally worries you sick & breaks your heart to see them fight!
Sending thoughts your way....
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