 Now I'm going to work kind of what I would call my next stage of my two-year-old program with this one, and this is a little more where all my two-year-olds are at this time of year. I'm going to work with a, right here he's craving to be even with it, awesome. He took that turn all himself. I'm just staying close with the hands, excellent. I want to be patient right here, weight on my cow, and now I want to hurry him through right there. I'm going to try to get another one there. That felt really good, felt like his timing was with that cow. The help I was giving him was minimal, awesome. That was nice timed. I'm going to hold right here, let him get comfortable. So we got a little herd in here this time. I like to work a bunch of used cows just all in here together because I feel like I get a little more of a herd pull. I also like to work one cow at a time because I can drive to that hip so much and not have to worry about recutting a cow every time. I like a horse to walk with caution through his cows and kind of stop every three, four steps and I start building that as a two-year-old and I'm going to want that all the way through till I'm showing them. The real reason is for that is I want to be able to control the speed that they walk up through the herd and as soon as I let out and square stop, good, cow-y back legs and then out of that turn I pushed him and I was hoping the cow would pull him up. It didn't so I wrestled him back, cocked the head, his shoulders are closer to the cow than the hip is so his angle is pure, he's comfortable, he's relaxed.