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    Automatic feeder for Corgi puppy routine

    This is a specific conversation about Automatic pet feeders — what to look for — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Starting a Corgi puppy on a structured feeding routine at 10 weeks is genuinely one of the best things you can do — it sets digestion patterns, prevents resource anxiety, and makes portion control much easier as they grow. With automatic feeders, the things that matter most are portion accuracy, ease of cleaning, and mechanical reliability. Cheap models jam constantly, drop inconsistent amounts, and the food hoppers are a hygiene nightmare to clean properly. Before I point you in a direction: is this feeder just for the puppy, or are there other pets in the house — and what's driving it, your work schedule, or wanting to lock in consistent meal times regardless of your own routine?
    Just the one puppy, no other pets. It's mainly about keeping meals consistent — I work from home but I want him to eat on a schedule rather than whenever I remember.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a good setup to automate early. A few quick questions about the puppy himself: how much does he weigh right now, and do you know roughly how much kibble per meal the vet or breeder has recommended? Corgi puppies at 10 weeks are usually on three to four small meals a day, so I want to make sure whatever I recommend can handle that frequency and those portion sizes accurately at the small end of the scale.
    He's about 3.5kg at the moment. The breeder said around 40g per meal, three times a day, with small kibble.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — 40g three times a day with small kibble is exactly where a lot of feeders struggle. Cheap rotary drum feeders are notoriously inaccurate at low gram counts with small pieces; they either drop too much or get stuck. For your situation, I'd go with the PetSafe Smart Feed 2.0. It's a proper programmable feeder — you can set up to 12 meals a day with portions as small as 1/8 cup (roughly 14g), so 40g is well within accurate range. The hopper and bowl both detach and are dishwasher safe, which matters a lot with a puppy because their saliva and food residue builds up fast. It also has a slow feed mode that dispenses the meal over 15 minutes, which is worth using with Corgis — they're a breed prone to eating too fast and developing bloat habits early. The app control means you can adjust the schedule without touching the unit, which is handy as his portions increase over the coming weeks.
    View PetSafe Smart Feed Automatic Feeder on Amazon
    That sounds really good. Is the app reliable? I've read some reviews saying smart feeders disconnect a lot.
    inparticular.ai
    The PetSafe Smart Feed 2.0 holds its programmed schedule in onboard memory, so even if the Wi-Fi drops or the app has a wobble, the feeder still dispenses at the right times. That's the critical thing — you want a feeder where connectivity is a convenience, not a dependency. The app itself is stable on the whole; occasional sync delays but nothing that affects feeding. The manual button on the unit also lets you trigger a meal instantly if needed. For a puppy routine, that reliability matters more than any smart feature.
    Great, I think that's the one. How do I transition him onto it rather than just switching overnight?
    inparticular.ai
    Run the feeder alongside you for the first three or four days — set it to dispense at the right times but stay nearby so he associates the sound of the motor with food arriving. Most puppies click on to it within two or three meals once they realise the machine is the source. After that you can step back entirely. Keep the schedule consistent for at least four weeks before making any adjustments — that regularity is exactly what you're trying to build neurologically at this age. You're in a great position starting this at 10 weeks.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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