This is a specific conversation about Pet cameras — watching them when you're away — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Monitoring a corgi around children unsupervised is a smart call — corgis are brilliant dogs but that herding instinct is deeply wired, and it can catch kids off guard even when the dog isn't being aggressive at all. Pet cameras range from basic motion-activated models to two-way audio and treat-dispensing versions, and the right one really depends on what you want to do with the footage. Is this purely for watching and reviewing clips, or do you want to be able to intervene in real time if things escalate? And are the children quite young — toddlers who might fall if nudged — or a bit older?
Mainly for watching and being able to step in if needed. My kids are 4 and 6, so yeah, the herding can knock them off balance. I want to be able to talk through the camera if I need to redirect him.
inparticular.ai
Got it — so you need live view, two-way audio, and enough image quality to actually see what's happening across a living room. How big is the space roughly, and is it well lit? That affects whether you need a wide-angle lens or a camera with good low-light performance.
It's a decent-sized room, maybe 5 by 6 metres. Natural light during the day but it can get dim in the evening.
inparticular.ai
That's helpful. For your setup I'd go with the Eufy Indoor Cam 2K — it's a genuinely solid camera for this exact use case. You get a 360-degree pan and tilt so you can follow your corgi around the whole room rather than being locked to one angle, the 2K resolution is sharp enough to see exactly what the dog is doing relative to the kids, and the two-way audio is clear enough that your corgi will actually recognise your voice and respond to a verbal cue, which matters a lot. It also handles evening light well with its night vision. Motion alerts are customisable so you can set it to flag activity in the living room specifically without being pinged every time someone walks past. It runs on the Eufy app, no monthly subscription, and it's under £40. For monitoring herding behaviour with the ability to step in verbally, it's the right tool.
That sounds good. Will the two-way audio actually work to stop him herding, or will he just ignore it?
inparticular.ai
Honestly, it depends on how trained he is to respond to your voice, but most dogs — corgis included — do react to their owner's voice coming from a speaker, at least enough to pause and disengage. It won't replace training, but as an in-the-moment interrupt it's genuinely useful. If he already knows a 'leave it' or 'place' cue, you can absolutely use the camera to deliver that remotely. The main thing is catching the behaviour early — herding usually escalates in stages, so having live view rather than just recorded clips means you can intervene before it gets physical.
Makes sense. I'll go with that one. Is there anything else I should set up on the camera to make it more useful?
inparticular.ai
Two things worth doing when you set it up: first, position it at dog height or slightly above rather than ceiling-mounted — you'll get a much clearer view of the interaction between the dog and the kids rather than just seeing the tops of their heads. Second, set up an activity zone in the Eufy app covering just the living room floor area so your alerts are triggered by movement there specifically. That way you're not drowning in notifications but you will get flagged when something's actually happening. The pan and tilt also means you can manually sweep the room from your phone if you just want to check in without waiting for an alert.