 I'm just going to stay on that cow's hip. That was better. I'm going to go this side. I just feel this helps a lot when you make a cut on a cow and it kind of makes a dive at you or something like that to where that horse is comfortable to let a cow go and then catch back up. There he kind of went to come out of it and then remember to draw back. I was kind of happy with that. Once again I'm going to work out of that, like to where that corner's my middle. So here I'm just making him stay on that cow. Read that cow. He's a little over rotated but I'm going to let him land here and he's going to learn to land here and come out of a bad situation and get back good even though I said it's important because now they go into it it's how they're going to come out of it but he's still going to learn like that muscle memory is really good but sometimes and to me that's what I'm going to do when I show. I'm going to drive up as far as I can and get a cow to come to me and keep that cow on me to where I can give ground and take ground where I want. Like there during that work I'm going to go back up to a cow and to me it's very important I think on being able to push a horse back up into a cow but not have them get faced in a backwards like when I say backwards I mean where their heads off here and their shoulders feel like they're going in because they're looking at the off foot you know to me when I push them back up into a cow I'm going to stay focused on that cow and keep just pick that shoulder up and come up so that they land better and when they land like that they're going to have time to pull back out of the way when they land like this it's going to make that hip stuck there and everything's in the way a lot of times they can hit a cow like in the butt and chase it off to me if they land like this it keeps