 I'm very big on on those horses, you know landing in that stop straight, but being ready, being smart, thinking with their hind feet, moving those hind feet and placing them before they go. It's gonna help them in that turn. I want them to be smart and rate and draw all the way through that turn because that's where the misses come. If he hurries or struggles we're gonna miss that cow. One miss times three you're out of the cutting or you have to come back and cut two more cows and really really go for it. If I can teach them horses to think and be smart, move those hind feet, get a wide base and be ready to turn. They aren't going to make that mistake through the turn. After that cow pulls them back through that turn, then it depends on the cow how fast we need to go or how hard we need to ride to catch that cow again. But I want them to always be thinking stop, get those feet set before you go, be smart and rate that cow through that turn. And is there a particular exercise you do? How do you get them base wide or to move those hind feet? I think a lot of it is I like to keep in that horse's shoulders a little bit closer to the cow than their hips and what I mean about that is keeping this angle up into that cow a little bit and what that does is this horse is a little smaller. She's a little shorter neck. What I'm doing is I'm making that move just a little bit smaller for a little bit easier for and what that does it allows her to draw right here through the middle of that turn and keep moving those hind feet while she goes all the way through that turn. She wants to get a little bit fast so I keep those shoulders right here. If there was a cow right here I'm keeping those shoulders up against that cow that's a little bit closer than her hip is and then when she comes through that turn. Last one I'm gonna work here. A lot of you guys might know him. This is Fracker Brown. He's a he's a four-year-old now. I just wanted to kind of show you guys what I'm striving for when I worked these three-year-olds. I know they're not all gonna be Fracker Browns but this is kind of the finished product. He's as smooth as a cat stud out of Jitters Brown that I I won the first go-around in the Fitcherty on him last year mark 223 high composite after the second go-around going into the semifinals he he is a pretty outstanding individual he's a pretty special horse to me as you can see right there he's a middle immediately drawn through the middle of that turn looking for the middle of that cow being very smart with his feet. I'll step him back up. He's a extremely smart horse about a cow he when I talk about I want him to to think and draw and right through that turn he's the perfect example of a horse that's just always thinking always thinking with his feet always thinking about that cow being very smart very smart right there that cow stopped and turned away he drew right back found the middle of that cow and did not make a mistake always thinking and reading that cow is the most important thing in a cutting horse in my opinion he's being real good right here now I'm just gonna have Kelly come in and start moving this cow just a little bit for me turn back for me and I'm just gonna find a spot to quit