 here doing stables and then next minute we've been going out on a search to look for a missing person in the bush somewhere. We do lots of our different patrols in the city and in the valley. You can stand there nice and quietly and second the game, Mr. We get the horses from all different places. Some of them are bred at studs that produce the horses like this Pershawn that I'm holding here. So they breed those horses and then we'll look at the stock that they have and purchase the quietest ones or the best ones for our purposes. We also have horses like Donated X Race Horses. Again we select a quieter horse because at the end of the day we still have to be able to do our job. Because all the horses are different when they come to us they all have different abilities. We do a lot of the sensory training for them so we do things with tarps, we do things with fireworks, different barriers, different surfaces like we'll put rugs down on the ground or we'll walk them through puddles, walk them over wooden structures to simulate all these sort of visual stimuli and audio stimuli that they'll come across doing their job. We march with the band and get the horses used to the drums and the bagpipes because that's always really beneficial for ceremonial occasions and parades. I've only been with Lance for a bit over 12 months. We're still getting to know each other. He's very quirky and he has a very different personality to the last one I had too. We just police from horseback so the horses are our vehicle so we need to know that we can rely on them when we're out on the road. In saying that we do all sorts of training with them but they're still flight animals, they still get a fright so we still need to be mindful of what sort of environments and situations that we put them in but generally the more training they get here and the more times that they do it the better they become at it. I've been here for about 13 years now so it's flown past really. It's a good job. My horse is pushing me out of the way.