I am a clergy person and before I got ordained, I always planned that I would get a dog and train him to come to work with me. When I got Tucker as a pup 4 years ago, and now he's the church mascot. Having a dog around really perked up people at the church. I keep a jar of suckers in my office and I hardly ever have to refill it anymore because the kids always ask for Tucker instead of suckers
Generally, he does very well. Most of the day he sleeps by my desk in the office. When someone sits in my office, Tucker lays at their feet an chews his bone. On Sundays during coffee hour, children take turns "walking" him. When someone knocks on the outside door, he does alarm barking, but is friendly when he sees the person.. We have toys at the office. One that he likes to shake and growl and whip himself in the head with, and tennis balls to chase. People love to play fetch with him down the long hallway outside of my office.
We are moving to a new church in a new state in April, and I was thinking about changing some of the rules in the new place. He gets really insistent trying to get people to play fetch, and thinks everyone who comes wants to play fetch. The new church we're going to is on 5.5 acres and has a big field out back. I was thinking that maybe we should keep the toys for outside play. If we get there early each day and spend a good amount of time outside playing fetch, he'll be more calm inside, right? I'd keep the bone around so he has something to occupy himself with when we have visitors. .
Our new church has a very large preschool and also houses an adult day care for the elderly. I would prefer Tucker understand that visiting these two groups is about greeting and being petted than playing. I'm not so worried about the older people. He's very good with babies and with kids 4 and over, but preschoolers sometimes make him nervous. Of course they all want to pet him because he's small and cute, but I keep him close around people we don't know well.
I've noticed that he's much more comfortable with children who have dogs at home and the tentative ones make him nervous. So I always tell the kids to let him know that they're the boss (meaning give him commands), and then it's fine. In fact we have 2 three-year-olds who love walking him and giving him commands, but they both have large breed dogs at home that they boss around.
Of course he wants to herd kids so he gets excited when he sees them in groups or if they're running. And like most corgis, he makes lots of gutteral noises. He does that even when I'm holding him for them to pet him. Is that okay? It doesn't bother me, because I know he's not growling, (he's not at all possesive about food with me) but I know it sounds bad to people who don't know what's going on. When I tell children it's okay because that's how he talks, I always make sure to tell them not to approach strange dogs and that if a dog they've never met does that, they should stay away.
Also, I've noticed that children who don't have dogs want to pat them on the back end because they're afraid of getting too close to the mouth. However, Tucker is very sensitive to that because he was attacked on his back end by an Australian Cattle Dog at the dog park about a year ago. So I always redirect them.
Another issue that I'm concerned about is that the people at the new church are excited about Tucker coming and many of them want him to meet their dogs. As he's gotten older, and since he was attacked, he's not so friendly with new dogs, and always wants to heard the big ones. I do know meeting others goes much more smoothly when no toys are involved. Once he's gotten to know new dogs, he's okay with them.
I am going to make sure that he feels secure when we move -- keeping him with me as much as possible at first. But I am hoping that the move will give us an opportunity to make some changes. What do you think?