 Hi, I'm Wayne Robinson. I'd like you to come and join me at my clinic. I look forward to seeing you, you know, and I'll help you as much as I can. Every horse and every rider there is at a different place. So if you're open to learn, you can see a lot of different things, you know. You're going to see some good things. You're going to see some things that probably ain't so good. But that's why it's good to see that. You know, so you can go home and think, man, you know, I'm on the wrong track. Or, man, yeah, I'm on the right track, you know. Wayne Robinson taking home more than $22,000 for the win. You know, you've got to go home and work at it. A lot of people have been to clinics and they've been going to clinics for 20 years and they're no better than when they started than when they are today because they don't go home and practice. You don't need a lot of information. You just need a little bit of information and you've got to go home and practice it, practice until you get it good. You've got to practice it until you don't even have to think about it and you just do it. Then you go away and get a bit more information and you come back. That's the way I've learned over the years, you know, since I was a teenager. I wasn't that smart. I didn't need a lot of information. I just took a little bit of information off people and I go away and I practice it. You know, at clinics, you're right, I'm at a clinic every day. I've got horses, I've got cows. I was taught and told to observe, remember and compare and I do that every day. Yesterday I was at a clinic at Silverado with a pre-work. Man, I was there with some good hands there and I'm watching little things, little things that I can get better at. It's part of learning. You've got to believe in your program from top to bottom, but that does not mean that you don't add to it. I'm adding to my program all the time. You've got to enjoy learning. You want to get better. To me, if you're not getting better, you're getting worse. So, you know, as far as people come to clinics, it's good. It exposes you to some different things. You know, in this area of two-year-olds or whatever, a lot of these guys, they want to get these cults hot-tied and pissed off and then they want to teach them something. I want to get a cult in a learning frame of mind and to get them into that learning frame of mind you can be teaching them some stuff. I'm not saying he's just loafing off and doing whatever he wants, but he wants to be with you. He's curious, he's interested, he's trying to help you. It's not a big intimidating deal. Where that horse comes from his side and tries to help you, where it's his idea to get it done. And that's important to me. It's a different feel. The intimidating deal, it only lasts for so long. But when you get that cult where it's his idea and he's given you everything he's got to try to figure it out and help you, man, it's a different feel to me. And then horses will go on. The issue is I see a lot of kids or a lot of people having with their horses and it's real simple. They don't, this is just one of them, but this is pretty simple, it's pretty basic. My deal, I believe anyone can do what I do on a cult. Anyone can do it. But you've got to understand a few little simple things. And a lot of people are trying to move the front end and all the weights on it. Some people are trying to move the hind end and they've got all their weight centered on it. If they just learnt where to shift that weight, like to move the front end, the weight needs to be back. To move the hind end, the weight needs to be forward. The first thing I do is shift his weight so he can move his front end, or shift his weight so he can move that hind end. Where is his mind? A lot of people are trying to turn him to the left and his mind's to the right. His mind's stuck at the barn to the right. It ain't going to work. The first thing you've got to do, you've got to get his mind back. You've got to get back over here and then you're rocking back and then you go. So it's understanding where he is at that time and it changes all the way through. Like from moment to moment, it changes. So keeping a track of that mind, you get it and let it go. Get it and let it go and you keep it longer. So just knowing where that horse is at. Man, it's a big thing. And knowing what happened just before he did something good. What happened just before he did something bad. So when it's shaping up to be good, just let it happen. Don't get in his way. But see that's a feel thing right there. But if it's shaping up to be something undesirable just before getting in his way. Just make that a little unhandy for him. But feeling where that colts at. There's times like first time on a cow or the first ride on him. He's going to do things the first ride that you're going to need when he's a five year old. If it's shaping up, just let it happen. But he doesn't understand why he did it. But he just did it but just don't kill it. We kill a lot of stuff. We kill a lot of good things in our horses. Because they're shaping up to do it and we don't feel it. And man, it's gone. It's finished. It's history. And then getting it tied into a cow. Getting it cow related. A lot of people can get a lot of stuff on a thing but they don't even blink an ear or an eye out of a cow. It's all mechanical. And then when they put their hand down they don't even know there's a cow in the pen. Now I don't want one taken over or running the show. I'm going to run the show. But man, he comes back to me for support and guidance. I'm helping him through there. I've got his back. He gets a little scared, a little up come, a little unsure. He knows I've got his back. And man, he will get brave. He will get brave. And you never ask him to do something he can't. Now that's where your better judgement comes in. Some of my colts I've, you know, it's gone. I've won a little bit on. And there's better colts out there. But I've never told them they're not as good as some of them, real good colts. Never. Never told them. You know, you never ask them to do something they can't. But you know, I'm not saying I don't get one to try. I teach one to try. Oh yeah. Got teaching try. But you build that in. From the first day I lay my hands on him to when I go shine. And build and try and trust. Very important. Very important. Especially for them horses to go on. I think I could help some people. Ride some colts and get along with their colts a little better. And don't go through some of the stuff that I went through. You know, I've been riding colts now since I was 13 and 31 years. And riding colts. And that's been my bread and butter. You know, for a long time. For long enough anyway. And I think I can help some kids avoid some stuff that I went through. You know, with a colt. You know, a lot of times colts are doing things that we don't want them to do. And it's because self-preservation is getting in the way. Or we taught them to do it. They're undesirable things that they're doing. We taught them to do it and we didn't even know it. Or they're scared. You know, or self-preservation is getting in the way itself. We can eliminate a few of them things. You know them? Like I kept saying. They want to get them hot-tied and pissed off and try to teach them something. And I think there's a better way.