 Okay, we're going to start with some two-year-olds. First off, this is a two-year-old Zach Philly. She's had about 60 days on cattle, and we'll show kind of how we want to work these horses on cattle. But before we start that, I'd like to show a little bit just how I like to get them broke, what I like to teach them initially, basically, how I want them to handle their body in a stop and a turn around, and then how we'll carry that on to how they work a cow. A lot of what I like to teach a horse, kind of the mechanics of the stop and the turn around, I want that horse to stop. Basically, getting this position here, I want that hip square behind them, that shoulders out of that turn, head into a cow. What I want a horse to do when I go and stop here, I want that horse to stop and then kind of draw their head back into that cow. I don't want them to fall into that cow. I want them to kind of draw that head back into that cow. Getting this position here and have them so broke. A cutting horse, if you have them too broke, they're thinking about the rider too much. There's kind of a fine line you can get to, and you can have them broke and nice and gentle, but you don't want to have a cutting horse too broke because a cutting horse has to relate to the cow, not to the rider. So you can kind of go to a certain point. You don't want them to be like a reigning horse, but you like to have them where you can draw it and stop them and everything, and be able to back them up, but you don't want them over broke. And what I call over broke is where they're thinking about the person too much. They haven't had enough time spent out in the pasture and just learning how to ride. So I like to have them just to a certain point, just where you can help them. And that's about as far as you can go. And I don't really want them any more broke than that. I don't like to have them like a reigning horse because a cutting horse has to relate to the cow. When I start working, what I want my horses to learn in our programs, I want a horse to learn how to rate a cow first. First thing I want to teach a horse to do is how to rate, how to just travel with a cow, stay a hold, and just how to rate, just to how to travel with one. Then I want to teach a horse how to stop and I ain't gonna, they gotta rate and then stop. I don't want them to turn too quick. I don't want my horses to cow up too fast. I want them to be real patient and learn how to rate a cow. She's waiting here nice and relaxed. That's what I want. Like Paul said, I don't want her jumping around. I want her here relaxed, ready to make that next move when that cow shows me what it's gonna do. Same thing again. Step across that cow, hit that stop good. She's ready for that next move. Okay, that's good. That's how you teach them. Still wanna help her. She felt like she was gonna go a little bit long that way, trying to do things just a little bit too much. I'd like this mare just to draw just a little bit more. She's just feel just a little uppity to me. I want her to soften up just a little bit more so I'm gonna work her until I feel her soften up.