 It's really very important for the community to be at the cutting edge of research so that the community can have directly the first hand on new discoveries and things that are applicable and relevant to take care and improve the health of these athletes, so the sports horses in Albera and in the Calgary area. When you have a research chair with funding available, you start with your IDs and you know the funding is there already for this kind of studies and then it speeds up a lot the process and so it's more efficient and you get quicker results and more results for your research studies. So we had horses that were untrained, unfit, unconditioned. We did a baseline measurement of the view to max on the track here at Barnard. Then we sent them to Water Train Meal Facility at Coulee Equine for one month and then they came back and we did re-measure the view to max after the training and of course like every good study we have a control group so we have a group with the Water Train Meal and a group that was just walking on the train with no water. Another project we're doing is looking at exercise induced pulmonary hemorrhage. There's lots of controversy in the racing industry right now about EIPH so exercise induced pulmonary hemorrhage. And we've done the first study just published this week on looking at how frequent that problem of bleeding is in barrel racers. The research we're doing is really focusing on exercise physiology. We've focused on lungs, heart and throat. So it's really how the horses are breathing, how these hearts are adapting to exercise and training and how to make sure things are safe and going well for these horses and so that they can run at their optimal level without getting injured and without getting any accident and things like that. So all the studies we are doing are really problem oriented and they are really applied and they'll have I think a direct impact on the community of horse owners and trainers so I think you know you don't have to be at the Olympic level to benefit from these studies at all. We're trying as much as possible to publish the results in what we call open access journals so that the public can have free access to the results and read these studies and see how they can benefit from them.