Speaker 2
It's a long sit. Okay. So it's like you have to sit and then wait and hold the sit until, you know, for a, it's not like a short, like just sit and then you get a treat. It's a sit and wait, people pass and then you get a treat. Is
Speaker 1
there any difference between putting the dog into a sit and soldier? Like, is it basically the same thing?
Speaker 2
Um, no, we do. I do sit a lot like just, so spooky.
Speaker 2
I do, I do sit all the time, just like if we're like, you know, in the house and like, just do a sit and he'll get like a treat or something. But this soldier, he has, he knows that he has to wait for the people or the dog. To pass us. So sometimes that takes like, you know, 30 seconds or a minute or something, and that he has to sit and wait and when they pass, he'll get the treat. So there is a different, I mean, he recognizes what he needs to do to get the treat on the soldier is wait for the people. Okay.
Speaker 2
and wait for the people. Okay.
Speaker 1
And if you told them to sit, like right now, if you went out with him and you told him to sit, it would be like the same expectation, right? Like he would be expected to sit until the person passed, but it's just like a different—
Speaker 2
No, well, maybe.