 I'm Cullen Chartier, you're here at my place today. We're gonna work a couple three-year-olds. I start working, I like to make sure that they feel that stop real good, kind of get used to my feet where I can get them and get that ribcage out of the way and hold them. This mero will get a little flat on the right side, so I try to hold her up as much as I can without making it a big deal. I'll put it with my feet on them a little bit, I'll square them for a little bit, just trying to get them to get used to that. Don't want to rush them through that turn. Come out of that turn, maybe just want to try it a little better. Sometimes she'll lope. Not a big concern right now. The main thing is, you want to get her tight. That stop, hold that turn, she's getting off just a little bit to that right. So, I'm gonna be a little more conscious about it coming out of this next turn. All right, getting used to her feet, real easy, real easy, real easy, easy. There, she's hitting and drawing, means to me she's reading that cow, waiting good, waiting good. She's just getting a little off to that right, so I gotta, as I go on through the year, make a point where I can get her to stick her up in there so that doesn't hurt me getting the show pen too much. Colin, you were saying that this filly gets too flat on her ends. How do you teach your horse to help change that angle? Well, I try to catch them through that turn when they're about three quarters of the way. I try to catch them with that foot and then if they don't acknowledge that foot, I'm gonna go to my hand and foot and try to invisible line and stay up in that V. This mare wants to get a little flat, naturally. And I think, so this is a Kit Kat Sugar Gelden. Might be one that I'm going to spoff charities with, still not real sure. Feel like he's gonna be ready early, he's cowy, physical. Got a little bit of fighting them, but I think that's gonna turn into some grit. He was a little heavy in the front end, so I just try to make him just pick up them feet, turn around in the circle. Doesn't have to be real, real fast right now, because he wants to get locked up. When he does that, I just walk him out. He's trying real hard, still just a bit wild. I feel like in time that'll come down, I'm not gonna fix it all in one work, but at least he's pretty controlled. Right here, I'm gonna control that cow, I'm gonna draw a little bit more off this end, turn and maybe just a tick too early. They're gonna come out of there nice, got stopped nice, let me get his rib cage out of the way. Nice and controlled, stick them up there just a little bit showing the way.