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When I had my rescue Kirby he would constantly do the same thing to Franklin. He had no interest in the toy and just wanted to SMASH Franklin when Frank was going after the toy. I paired a firm no with a remote control shock/vibrate collar and it worked very well. I had the collar on vibrate set to mid-level and it was enough to break his focus and startle him. He would then associate my "no" with a vibration or shock and began listening much better. He was the kind of dog that always thought of ways to get around what you were trying to teach him, he knew when he was at arms length or knew if I was in reach of the long line I used to use on him and would be good until just out of reach. I viewed the remote collar as a way to extend my arm so to speak. He was smaller than Franklin but came with such force that he had injured Franklin on two occasions and I was just tired of his nonsense.
If you do decide to go with a collar I would take them out together and work with him when you know there won't be many other dogs at the park. Work on associating your command, and his not listening to your command, with the shock or vibrate and then you can introduce it to a packed dog park so that you can just use your voice. The ultimate goal would be to phase out the collar and get him to where he is just listening to you. The other option would be take them separately or leash him while playing fetch with her and then release him.
I activated it right before impact. He was clearly not chasing the ball but had his eye on bashing Franklin right before Franklin got the ball so I would tell him no and hit the remote right before he ran into Franklin. It got to where I could just tell him "no" and he would veer away without smashing into him. In the end if I had to choose between him chasing a ball or bashing into Franklin every time i went to throw a ball then I'd rather just have him not chase it at all.
Remember, the point of the collar is he will have no idea where the correction comes from. If he associates it with nearing the other dog, he may decide to rectify the situation by attacking the other dog, especially if he is the more dominant of the two.
I personally don't like dog parks because I have known of many dogs where things went wrong in that setting. You have little control over your own dog and virtually no control over other dogs once they are all loose together. It has also been my experience that most people with aggressive dogs tend to make excuses for their dogs, underestimate their potential to harm, often blame others when something happens and are generally in denial. If you encounter one of these dogs at the dog park, your dog is definitely at risk. By taking him there you accept that risk as well as any Vet bills that can follow. Long walks are a much better way to exercise your dogs if you live in a townhouse and that will not create any animosity between your dogs.
As for playing with the ball, I would teach them at home to go after the ball one at a time, on their own name, while the other waits in a down position. You need to have a good down stay first with both dogs reliable. Start with some activity that is low key, like petting the other dog, later go to throwing a rope toy a short distance in the room, then increase the distance thrown (always away from the dog on the down stay, never directly past him) then you can try the ball by just rolling it a short distance. Realize that the chase instinct in Corgis is very strong and natural to your dog. Work WITH them and take it as far as you can, rather than punish because they are in a situation they cannot handle. You may also consider obedience classes, through different levels and then Agility, both mentally and physically stimulating.
As for the shock collar, Melissa had some measure of success with Kirby, but Kirby was a rescued problem dog that she eventually had to give up, all very demanding and difficult to do. You want to handle your dogs in a manner that fosters structure and cooperation, rather than competition and correction which can ultimately backfire.
Anna makes good points and I have taught one of my dogs to wait his turn on command (he clearly resents it but listens); the other is so motion-activated that I hate to even try but she is easy to distract away from one thing by simply moving another thing.
My solution to the fetch problem is I ALWAYS use two: two balls, two frisbees, two rope toys, or whatever I'm throwing. That way just one dog (not both) needs a strong "wait" and you send the dog that tends to chase dogs instead of toys off after the first ball, then throw the second one for the dog with the strong toy drive/retrieval instinct.
In our case, Maddie mostly runs around with the toy in her mouth, gleefully half-chasing Jack every time I throw his and doing big loopy circles. The toy in her mouth keeps her from assaulting Jack as he chases his.
Anna is right: the instinct to take off after something that moves is VERY strong in some Corgis and you will get further by trying to work with the dogs to find a solution that is enjoyable for all of you.
As for being pushy at home, you just need to work on not letting one dog push the other away to get attention. This can take awhile and you must be 100% consistent.
By the way, I started making sure I had better control after we had what could have been a very bad accident. Jack and Maddie went after the same chuck-it ball from different angles and did NOT see each other. They collided full speed, head-first, at about a 90-degree angle. They came up in a tangle of a very loud fight for a brief second or so, and then Jack started wailing in pain--- it's a sound I never heard a dog make and hope never to hear again. He ran to us full speed with his eyes squinting badly and continued to wail for long enough that we thought we would need to take him to the ER right then and there.
After a short time he stopped but still squinted and looked very uncomfortable. Then he was ok. I am pretty sure Maddie's open mouth caught him very hard in the head and it must have hurt like heck. In retrospect, he may have had a bit of a concussion but his eyes tracked normally so we just observed him carefully at home for a few days.
Anyway, it could have been a bad injury or a bad fight, since the dogs were stunned and I don't even think they knew who had hit them (neither is a fighter, usually).
So after that, I made sure I had a better system.
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