 Hello, my name is Steve Ailhoff and I come to you today and going to talk to you about the benefits of keeping your horse inside a cow here at home and what that does then for when you go show them and you cut a tough cow or a bad cow and you're able to control that cow by staying inside it or then you cut a good cow and then you can step your horse outside that cow and then it makes them that much better. If you're not consistent with where you're at on that cow or if this horse isn't consistent where he's at on this cow then he doesn't know where to get to. When he leaves that turn he doesn't know where that they're going to get to so you have to teach this horse their comfort zone. It's a release point basically. Teach this horse the release point is get to that spot on that cow and get comfortable. Get to that spot on that cow and get comfortable and another big deal with that is just traveling traveling with the cow letting this horse be comfortable traveling with the cow not always trying to get outside of it and stop with it just travel with the cow. Travel coming out of that turn and stay consistent with where I'm at on this cow and come from behind that way we've got somewhere to go. So like right here I'm on that cow's eye my angle is here even though I'm working around I'm going in straight lines so I'm going to ask this horse to go buy that cow and when he does I'm going to bring him back inside it. I want you to travel with the cow comfortable and I want you to hit in that stop comfortable come from behind and do not go buy the cow. I'm going to ask him right here he doesn't want to go perfect reassuring back inside that cow a little bit back inside that cow go to the cow's butt inside perfect comfortable back inside that cow a little when it goes faster that's what we need to be slower especially here at home that way when you go to the show the horses when it goes faster is slower mentally and then you can really put your feet on them and go show them and ask for those big scores.