Welcome to Corgi Connection of Central Texas
Who We Are
I have been working tirelessly for the past 7+ years building up my breeding program to what it is this year. I am very hopeful to have puppies pretty regularly from now on. I am passionate about animals, their nutrition, training, and also veterinary medicine. Just a snippet about me: long before I had children, I wanted to become a Veterinarian, but God had different plans for me, so I joined the Army, became a Russian Linguist, served for 9 years, made a million mistakes between then and now, but throughout all of that, ended up marrying the love of my life and we have our little piece of Heaven on earth together raising our 6 children, Corgis, and various other farm animals, including a family milk cow, ponies, cats, peacocks, chickens, meat rabbits, dairy goats, ducks, and guineas, all of which our Corgis (both adults and puppies alike) are routinely exposed to. There is no place I’d rather be. I guess I am guilty about bragging about our puppies being raised right, but they truly are. Caring for our animals is definitely a family affair. I do not (could not) do this all by myself. Our female Corgis do not ever birth their puppies alone. We are by their sides from the time the first puppy is born until the last one is delivered. The females all whelp in our master bathroom, which means we literally camp out on the bathroom floor waiting for each puppy to be safely delivered. The puppies are then raised in our home until they are at least 4 weeks old and eating solid food, at which time they get REALLY stinky. They then move to our finished, heated/air conditioned Corgi Cabin, which is where most of our adult Corgis are kenneled only at night to eat their dinner and have their own space until early morning, when they are let out into their spacious runs. When the puppies are old enough, they are put outside during the day, weather permitting, in a nice puppy run. Then, when they are about 6 weeks old, they get to explore the internal “core” of our farm. Our house is set in the middle of our small farm with puppy approved fencing all around it. The farm animals’ paddocks are around the outside of that fencing. Our puppies are able to safely get nose to nose with all of the animals while they are exploring outside. While some might disagree with this setting, I humbly stand firm that their encounters here only make them the best socialized puppies possible. Sadly, I have seen listings of puppies where the breeders boast that their puppies never touch dirt. While that might work for a toy breed, I find it unacceptable for a working/herding breed, which the Corgi breed absolutely is. Well, I’ve gone on and on for far too long. I just want you to know a bit about how we do things so you can make the best possible informed decision while choosing the breeder of your future Corgi puppy. If you are interested in adopting one of our Corgi puppies, please send me a message and I will send you our adoption details. Please feel free to ask any questions. Thank you! Kim