 Alright, we're going to work a couple of shell horses now out of the herd, kind of show how we'd go about getting the horse prepared to show. This mare right here, this is New Isle Woods, the mare I've had a lot of success on. She's been real good, consistent, real athletic mare. I want her to stay relaxed and wait right there, so that's better timing, starting to get better. She's finally starting to relax. Stay in time with that cow, think better. Wants to go too quick right there again, do the same thing, not going to let her go. What I'm basically telling her is, is no, it's not time to go yet. You got to wait, be sure that cow is going before you go, so there again I'll let that cow go, reinforce that weight there, and you know, when I have a horse like this, I'm going to work her until she slows down and begins to work the way she's supposed to. Now we're starting to get a little better. And I'll work her like that until she, when she starts getting good, showing me she wants to do it the right way, I'll quit for today, we'll come back and do it again tomorrow. Alright, I'm going to touch on a little bit about showmanship, and what I try to do and think about while I'm showing. I have cows picked, they say I like this yellow baldy standing here, but I also know, nobody's cut this gray cow. I got to know, I'll know, I'll try to remember every cow in this pen, and I may want that yellow baldy, and I'm going to try to bring it up. But if that gray cow steps in a good spot, I'll know if she's been worked or not. And what I'll try to do is, I've got to be aggressive, I'm going to show that judge I've come here to show, and now I'm going to use my feet enough to help my horse, to help her. I'm not going to try to get in her way, I'm going to sit up straight, and let my horse handle it. And I can only score as much as the cow I cut. I'm not going to try, if I cut a 71 cow, I'm just going to try to make it as good as possible, right there I'll help my horse all the way across the pen. I'm cutting. You cannot cut a cow, once I start, make a commitment to walk up through that herd on my cuts. I never back up, I may stop, but I'll never back up. And my rain hand, I'll always walk down there, I'll have my hand on the horn, and I'll always, I try to point my rain hand up, so that I'm kind of like pointing at that cow walking away. And how you control a cow when you cut, and that takes a while to learn, is