 So hi my name is Russ Carroll and I'd just like to welcome you all here to One Oak Ranch. I've been working here for about four years and here at One Oak we kind of cater to the amateur clientele. It's a big part of my program and just kind of wanted to share a practice night with you guys. Hopefully you can benefit from it. We're just going to go through a regular night of practice for each one of my clients and I'm just going to kind of show you how I try to get them and their horse prepared to go to a show up and we're going to make sure everything's in a good spot before we try to put our hand down so we don't have to be in any kind of hurry at all as far as getting our hand down. That little black cow or that brown cow, both of them are in a good spot. Just pick out one right there and just walk straight to it. Make sure it gets away from the others. Keep walking. Keep walking. You're doing good. Everything really slow and smooth. Good. Good. Now just helping connect to that cow with your feet just a little bit. Wait right there. Just wait. Good. Wait on that cow. That cow will tell you where it's going next. Now sit. Right foot only. Sit. Good job. Don't lean. Just sit. Sit real easy. Just melt down on it. Good. Left foot and sit. Look for that stop. Perfect. Lisa right foot and thanks stop. He's okay. Let him stop. Good. Now left foot. Excellent. Good job. Wait on the cow right here. Let it slow down. Russ in that work with Lisa you talked about left foot, right foot. Can you just explain that which foot you're actually in and why that means that? So I think the simplest concept for somebody especially that's just learning in order to get across that cow and get to the spot on that cow that we need to get to stay even on both sides of the cow. I feel like by asking them to use left foot, right foot, meaning the cow side foot, meaning the foot that's closest to the cow. So if we're going to make a turn and head over to our right, we're going to try to get to our right by using our left foot, which is the cow side foot, to step on over there and try to control that cow if at all possible and ride that horse to the stop. We want to land on this side of the cow, the same place we land on this side. So when we turn back to the left, start traveling to the left side of the arena. We want to use our right foot to push the act to the cow and sit. Good, Lisa. Good. Good. Now whoa. That's a good spot right there because see he got he got good and tight and got on his butt. Cow made him think back. So that's a good place, Shannon. Good job. Right foot right here a little bit. Good. Good. He's thinking in, so I'm going to take him on straight. Good. I'm going to try him right here a little bit, making him get smarter. Good. Right foot, right foot. Get there. There you go. Good. We'll sharpen him up right here a little bit. Okay. Now pick your hand up, Shannon, on these ends, I just want you to just set him in that ground and rock him back just a step. Okay. Ride him across that cow and stop. Pick your hand up, back him up. Good. There you go. Now come all the way this way, like you're controlling that cow. Pick your hand up, rock him back. Perfect. Now maybe turn him around one way or the other right there, making him think back and then turn around. Good. Get him off your right foot right there a little bit. Perfect. Back again. Now off your left foot. Good, Shannon. One more time back. Pretty hard. There you go. Now you're ready. Okay. So what I was telling Shannon, I don't know if you got that dunking, but I'm just, I want her to mainly focus to start off with just on our cuts right here, just being comfortable her and her horse, taking those cattle and going forward with them. He gets a little tight out of show as far as cutting the cow. So we're just going to keep this very relaxed cattle are walking away. So right there, Shannon, just walk with those cows and get him real comfortable just walking up there and everything's nice and relaxed. Now get ahold of this last cow a little bit right here. There you go. Now hand down.