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Cuteness overload: Corgis are king at this 'pawsome' cafe

When customers walk into Bangkok's "Corgi in the Garden" cafe, they're greeted by a dozen fluffballs on stubby legs rushing out to greet them, jump in laps and shake hands for treats.

 Juarawee Kittisilpa (Reuters)
Bangkok, Thailand
Thu, March 28, 2019

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Cuteness overload: Corgis are king at this 'pawsome' cafe Corgi dogs play with customers at Corgi in the Garden cafe in Bangkok, Thailand, on March 15, 2019. (REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun)

It started as an over-sized litter and turned into a business plan.

When customers walk into Bangkok's "Corgi in the Garden" cafe, they're greeted by a dozen fluffballs on stubby legs rushing out to greet them, jump in laps and shake hands for treats.

The cafe houses 12 corgis, whose popularity has been soaring among Thai dog lovers for their roly-poly build and an almost infallible ability to make people smile.

"They're funny dogs, like their appearances, short and stubby. These are their unique appearances which I like," said cafe owner Tanchanok Kanawaong, the cafe owner.

"And I also like their laughable characteristics as well, they're so funny."

In Tokyo, Bangkok and other cities, "cat cafes" have been popular for years.

The corgi cafe is roughly the same model - just for aficionados of the specific breed of dog most famously beloved by Britain's Queen Elizabeth II.

Read also: Queen's last corgi dies, leaving only dorgis: report

The queen's last purebred corgi died in October 2018. She kept some 30 corgis in her life, even inspiring an animated film The Queen's Corgi which has yet to get a release date.

Back in Bangkok, Tanchanok's commoner corgis are being put to work six days a week - but with plenty of nap breaks and run time in the garden, she says.

Customers pay about $11 for one-hour sessions with the dozen corgis with names like Porkchop, Pumpkin, Salmon, Bean, and Babycorn.

One customer, 36-year-old Chutima Jaroonjintayanon, said she's here to "learn more about their characteristics" as she was considering getting a corgi of her own.

Tanchanok said she hadn't planned on running a corgi cafe, but a surprise litter of pups gave her the idea.

"I just wanted to share the love and happiness," she says. "Two of my dogs had seven puppies ... and the number grew, so we wanted to spread the joy with others."

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