 This is what we call our century type training and basically what we're trying to achieve here with the horses is to expose them to the sort of stimuli they're going to encounter when they're out doing their operational police work. So there's no real right or wrong as long as there's nothing here that can particularly hurt them so that if they run into something that's out of the ordinary when they're out on patrol they'll behave in a manner where the troops can control them and keep themselves safe and the public. And it also allows the police to do their job. So the calmer the horse is going, the less time the rider's got to worry about riding his horse and he can worry about doing his police work and keep his eye out for things that they might be looking for in any particular patrol. The more boring training but very essential to us is what Questry and People would call flat work. And flat work basically just works on your three main paces of walk, trot and canter and we train them so that they're responsive to our aid. So from a lay person's point of view so they can walk, trot, canter, stop, stand still move backwards, move sideways, whatever the job might require in a controlled manner. And the other training we do is we have the police being about whatever we can and just expose them for measure.