 This weekend has been a horsemanship clinic a colt starting clinic has been part of it I mean it's super important to ag a lot of people have gotten away from working cattle horseback But there's still some places especially in this part of Arkansas and the hills and the mountains and the forest and everything There's places where a four-wheeler or feed trucks not gonna go and you're still gonna have to send a cowboy up their horseback And we are firm believers that working cattle horseback is is the most low stress. It's the best way It's the friendliest if you will way that we can do it We're concerned with our cattle's welfare if we thought there was a better way a more low stress way for us to take care of Our cattle we do it that way, but using horsemanship using our horses to take care of has proven time and time again It's easier on the environment. We're not tearing up pastures driving the truck and tractor out through it So our grass is coming back better next year and our cattle are staying quieter So we're not running weight off of them And for me the Colts starting clinic go hand-in-hand with agriculture in the industry of Arkansas Especially because we are a major cattle producer. That is one of the big things that we do here in the state We love the ranch inside of it, but there's also a pleasure side of it You know the equine industry is major here in Arkansas just right up the road We've got one of the racetracks and you know, there's multiple million dollars worth of horses there They can't make it there unless they start from the bottom start being started as Colts You know, I feel like for us, you know passing the knowledge and the things that we have to go with the cowboy stuff for horsemanship is just goes hand-in-hand into you know, it's it's generational and most Americans now are at least three generations removed from the farm and There's been a big push to get back to the farm life And it's from people that really enjoy the culture and enjoy the idea of it They don't know the things that they should because their Korean parents did it but they didn't learn it from them And so having this opportunity to share that with them only grows and benefits our industry And I think if we don't pass knowledge down from generation to generation like Chad's Grandpa had a really great recipe for mustache wax that he made out of bare fat killed right here in the mountains of Arkansas That didn't get passed down and that's why it looks like two hyenas got the tails tied together And they're trying to split. Okay, if if that knowledge And a lot of times in horsemanship and things of that nature, there's not necessarily a correct answer There's not only one solid ABCD. This is the result And you know, it's good to be able to come and get out of your comfort zone And to be willing to try something new to get the desired result that you haven't been able to find on your own and Faith face as well. It's the same thing. You know my wife and I unless we can do it together and or with our kids we don't know we don't do it and You know, that's true in the ag industry as well as in our faith