 It's kind of down there on behalf of the training staff here and the guys that arrived with the rest of them. I appreciate you coming out and making your time. Please, because we're supposed to all those agents up right here. I like that, sir. It's very nice to be out with us tonight. I'd like you to take a little turn and see our bar if you'd like to, right? Come this way. We'll go this way. Unfortunately, you're never going to change to come up here and ride with us. This has been here for quite some time. All of our horses that were donated to us come here to start the training. Most of them are thoroughbreds. This particular horse here is a stallion. He's turning the real good grease horse. Some of these horses were kept just for training. I don't know if you've heard now, but we're working now training some of the vice presidents. For weeks. That makes one for a week of training. All your guys came through here for many weeks and for many years. We saw it eight years ago. We have all kinds of horses. The colors, the greys. We'll try to keep one kind of horse. This is Andre Seltzer. Andre takes care of the stalls here. He's been doing on Gimp Crack the horses you ride quite a bit. He's familiar with it. I don't know what's going on. But all the horses are done here. They come here for about 30 days or 70 years. And they always stay that way. Very consistently big ones too. This one just came in yesterday. He's like 17 hands. Is that the one you got from Warren? He came from Middlebrook. Middlebrook. You can see these are the old stalls. I don't know if you're familiar with it. It was locked for him. He probably saw it many years ago. He's not built like that anymore. This was built late in the 50s. The ring was added on. This is the oldest horse we have right here. It's about 25 years old. It still works still. For racing. I had a mare once who was exceptional. 25, she dropped down. We don't have any mares. Only because we have the stallions. So it'll be a little difficult to keep mares here with us also. But we do have some stallions. We like to take them. Hi. How are you? If you come up, we'd like to show you a lobby and some of the photos we have there. Even though you're leaving office, Mr. President, you're certainly welcome to still come ride with us. Thank you. Anytime you get down. It might be a little more relaxing now that you're on. I won't be quite as big a group. Thank you. Again, this is a lot of train work. These are basically your agents. They went through from PPG when they went through training. PX, who's the front of yours, did his riding and training up there. And then he still comes up and rides with us. And I know you remember Touch Park. Oh, yeah. He had us down. He had our training class. And some of the guys down at his office. The Course Island, if you remember the photo, I'm sure you've had a few in the other alps, but we still are in that one. We went down several years ago and had a photo with it. Janet Fish. Do you remember the liposigns that they brought to you from Austin? Yeah. Well, that's Judge Park when we kept the horse here. Yeah. Yes, that's right. With a hope they may be a reason for reading him. I think they had a gill with him. We talked to his son, I believe he did, finally. Had a gill with him. But if you wouldn't mind, we'd like you to get some photos here with some of them. Thank you very much. Thank you for the outdoors. Thank you very much. Here in Washington, come on up and ride with us. Glad to have you with us. Thank you very much. We'll put them on the sidecar. If you'd like to take out his presence, let's just see the guys that you work with and what you do at Camp David and also the horses that were given practice. Where he stayed, this was his home. I think I saw all of you lined up that way once out there on the mall when I came over and that was when the horse show. Yeah, that's correct. The helicopter. That was the only action I saw. This is, if you remember nature's dancer that your wife wrote. Of course he's still here. That's a treat for him today. And this is where Demprav and Norman would be kept but we haven't been in the ring now with the officers that have been working with the Secret Service and on your detail for the last year. So you'd like me to hold your gloves for the full? If you remember, this is Billy Good. The guys introduced himself. Remember Willie, our horseshoe, or take care of Jim Crack? And if Wayne Carroll and Jim Crack. Hey Jim Crack. And if you could. Jim Crack's used to this. The news if... Oh you didn't get in, I'm sorry Billy. I set up a group shot here. The officers on the detail please Mr. President Feud, stand right here in the center. Nice and tight. So Sergeant on the other side here. Pull it in tighter. Hands on your sides guys. Chief and director, Willie Culkin and all the rest of them. In here please. Spread out a little bit. Chief. Is the director here? Thank you. You want to come forward so we can see him around? Yes, sir. Mr. President, many things I've served as your chief in seven and a half years of your administration and there's been a lot of impacts that's occurred during that time. Starting I guess with Air Florida 90. And then of course we had the hostage situation at the Washington Monument. And then I guess the next major impact was the retirement of Sergeant Major Dennis Ayers. Yes. But seriously, I think General MacArthur once said as he was leaving, old soldiers never die, they just fade away. Well I'd like to say on behalf of the Park Police that you certainly have been tops on our list as a leader and you will never fade away because you'll always be in our hearts and our memories. And on behalf of all members of the U.S. Park Police I'd like to present you with the retirement plaque. This is Ronald Reagan, President of the United States of America in appreciation of your support and assistance on behalf of the United States Park Police and in recognition of your esteemed leadership in the administration of justice as our Commander-in-Chief, Chief Len A. Charing December 17th, 1988. And we certainly wish you the best of health, happiness, and certainly happy trades. Well I'm greatly honored by this and deeply grateful to all of you for all the cooperation when you discovered that you had to make the Secret Service a mounted outfit and did so. Mr. President, the Secret Service is going to yell at me for this but we have a couple agents that have burdened with the program with us and trained with us. Is it possible we could get a couple pictures of our friends, the agents? Karen, we've got to be close brothers. The agents that have been on the writing program please step forward and the rest of us can get out of the way there. Doug and Karen and... Doug? Come on in here. Don't be shy, let's go. And the guys will work too, Bob. Come on in there. We want to get one just with the agents. For us it's fine. Frank, right here. And we'd like to get in with... Now let Mark please get in. To show that they work together. Believe it or not, they really work together. Come on Doug, smile. This is embarrassing. Don't let anybody put a label on the picture that we were under arrest. Hopefully you can come back and ride with us sometime. It is a protected environment. Here's where we do all of our training for the horses and the men. We got this under your administration. I know the old barn. I know you did. I remember when you came up there. I've had a horse story that I think I would tell. Since we're all in that business. You know right now out of the ranch I'm riding a grey called El Alamein that was given to me by the previous president of Mexico. Delimitri. No, not Delimitri before him. Lopez Portillo. And we got it. Grey. That horse wouldn't come out of the stall except on his hind legs with you holding him down. Screaming and pawing and so forth. Finally you'd get him groomed and be all right when he was tied up and then get a good ride on him. One day I was over in Arizona and a group of fellas out of the ranch were talking and they told me that one of the fellas there had been a wrangler for the president. And I looked at him and he was kind of smiling and I started telling him about the horse and I told him I saw the smile and brought him and I've always had a suspicion and I said tell me he was trained that way? He said he is. This was the bunch of a thing. I see the horse coming out. This is the horse that the president brought and they see him coming out and all of this thing and he's going to ride that. What are the problems? What are the questions? We broke him. He now comes out of the stale. This is all unfortunate. That's great. What a thing to do. For that image. That's the difference in our society. Thank you so much again and we wish you and your family the most joyous holidays. Thank you for taking time out. When you come back for a visit we'll talk them up for you any time I come for a ride. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. I think he knows. That's very good. Thank you all. Thank you. Have a nice holiday. Thank you.