 They're all a little different, and this one has a tendency to want to think about me quite a bit, but so I try to feed the cow to her as much as I can, so she kind of takes over. They ultimately have to do it by themselves with your help, using your legs and things of that sort. I like to get them as broke as I possibly can, that way when I am training on them, when I adjust a horse, I can do it without a lot of harassment from the horse. I can do it, be done, and hopefully they'll take it and go with it from there. A lot of moving look right there, just after they do that. When they make a big hard move, you have to secure them again, and hopefully eventually they'll do it without any complications. Feel comfortable doing it. It's a bigger colt, but he's a lot stouter, handles himself pretty good. Just let him hunt that cow, like how he stops there and looks back into that cow, and moves over yourself. When they hold up here just a little bit, reads that cow awfully well. You can train and train on some horses, and that's something we'll just naturally get to do things a little bit nicer, a little bit better, and that separates the really good horses from the ones that are just average. A little bit comfortable right here.