 This is going to be a horsemanship riding instruction clinic. And it's a little smaller, so there's going to be lots of one-on-one time, lots of demonstration. And this is about a clinic is about learning. And if you don't learn, if you want to get better, you've got to learn to ride better. The better you ride, the better you're going to get done. The better you're going to do it at cutting. I'm going to work on all aspects. And it all comes down, and I don't care who you are. I don't care just like myself training a horse at a clinic. If you don't do the foundations right, cutting a cow. If you're not thinking the same way that your horse, I want mine. So when I train a horse, I want a rider to think the same way as what I'm trying to teach my horse to think. Rate, stop first, see what's going to happen, then react. That happens in herd work. You have to rate a cow. You have to be able to read a cow. And so it all comes down, I'm going to work on foundation. If you're struggling with herd work, to me, it's because you're not rating a cow right. Then you've got to be ready for the stop. It happens in the herd. Everything starts with that part. You know, not just have a big open arena and people are riding around. I'm going to set up some barrels and stuff where people have to ride around. And consequently, you have to use your hands, your feet, everything. Slow your horse down, how to speed your horse up at the same time, just with some simple barrels or learning how to ride from point A to point B. It's very simple exercises, but very important exercises about how to handle your horse. Are you telling your horse to do the right things? All that little stuff will be huge when you go to the show panel. Well, the biggest transformation I think they're going to get out of this, or hopefully they get out of the clinic, is about the simple stuff. How that simple stuff makes the big stuff better. The better you ride, the better the horse. Being able to bring a horse up to a level instead of the horse coming down to your level. I want a horse to come up to the rider's level, not the other way around. We're not accepting a lot of people. There's going to be seven people, so there's going to be lots of one-on-one time. We're not going to rush through. You're going to be able to ask lots of questions. So there's going to be lots of cattle to work, if you like. So there's going to be a lot more one-on-one time. And you don't have to wait around so long for your next turn. And that's really important because we can just keep repeating, repeating. So it's just like training a horse. It's about muscle memory. Do it so much that you don't even think you're doing it anymore. I'm going to also take a few horses and I'm going to, for demonstration purposes. Because I'm going to be talking to you about what I'm doing while I'm working a horse. Then it's really important for visual, visual effects. Because I'm going to be trying to do the exact, I'm going to be doing and telling my horse. And I'm going to try to explain to you while I'm doing it while I'm working a horse. So there'll be lots of, again, this clinic is not about how good of a horse you're riding. I don't care what horse you're riding. This is about increasing the skill of the rider. We'll send people home with a kind of a personal work plan. This is kind of like when you go to a personal trainer to work out. He's going to give you some homework to do. Well, I mean, it's going to be fun. Steve's going to cook and he's a really personal fella at the Steve D's, where the place is at. He's very personable and he's very entertaining. And it's, again, smaller people, less people. We get to know each other more. There's more one-on-one time. We get to tell stories. So it's going to be fun, too. There's going to be lots of schooling and direction. But there's going to be lots of time to joke and have