Central Queensland cattle handler, 4, knows his way around Texas longhorns
Leading a half-tonne cow with giant horns around a paddock is all in a day's work for four-year-old Jace Lamb.
"I like brushing her and washing her," he said.

Jace, and his siblings, Johannah, 7, Jack, 11, and John, 14, are fourth-generation cattle handlers on a 6,475-hectare property between Banana and Theodore in central Queensland.
"My grandfather spent the last few years of his life here with us," dad Dan Lamb said.
"He got an immense amount of enjoyment sitting on the verandah and watching the three generations below him working together and doing his life's work, continuing it."
Ever since Jace learnt to walk, he has had no trouble putting bulls and heifers in their place.
"Our youngest, who is now four, started showing longhorns when he was just two," Ms Lamb said.
"He particularly enjoys it."
All four children have their own "sweet-natured", horned animals to break in, take care of and lead.
"We know their [the longhorns'] personalities so much that we just trust them," Ms Lamb said.
"I think having grown up with the horns, they're [the kids] aware of how to move their body around them."
Before and after school, which they do through distance education, the kids work with their animals.
"They seem to get a lot of pleasure out of seeing the cows go from something that's never had a hand on them, to something that just wants to be with them," Ms Lamb said.