In the words of her mother, Evie Smith is a determined little girl.
Little sister to Piper, 17, Tillee, 15, and Axel, 13, she is very outgoing.
Daughter to Trent and Lee Smith, Chinchilla, she is very stubborn.
And granddaughter to Barry and Debbie Standing, Pittsworth, she is a fighter.
But perhaps it's the words of those who treat her for Cystic Fibrosis that paint the greatest picture of the six-year-old.
"She might even be referred to as a walking middle finger at the hospital, determined to do it her way and on her terms," Mrs Smith said.
"Her personality and that little bit of sparkle that she does have, it's probably the reason she keeps on fighting the way she is and it's what's keeping her going."
A surprise bundle of joy for the family in 2014, Evie was just four weeks old when they received the diagnosis. Since then, Evie and her family have been battling a disease that will stay with her for the rest of her life.
"We learnt all the physio and everything that was required to try and keep Evie healthy and for the next four or five years, Evie tracked the same where we would have a yearly admission to hospital and she would get what they would call a tune-up in the CF world," Mrs Smith said.
It was in 2019 that the family started noticing Evie was quite slender and she wasn't tracking well on the growth charts.
"We were going down for a check-up one Friday and Trent and I had noticed that breathing was noticeably hard for her, she was struggling to breathe," Mrs Smith said.
"When we got to Brisbane, they had to get the Emergency Department involved to stabilise her because her oxygen levels and her stats had plummeted dangerously low, so she was sent to Emergency and then she was sent to PICU, where they inserted many, many lines in her little arms and legs to administer medicine and put her on a breathing machine to support her breathing.
"About seven days after that, we were transferred back to our normal ward where over the next six months we were delivered news that Evie's lungs had been severely damaged and that she was going to face a double lung transplant."
Since then, the toll on Evie's body and the support she requires has grown, meaning her admissions into Brisbane have become month-long stays.
"We're on week six at home at the moment so we're very excited, and she goes back in a couple of weeks for another month's stay," Mrs Smith said.
"Those longer stays are becoming more frequent and they've just said that moving forward we will be relocating to Brisbane as her care needs are getting more and more.
"And when the time is right for Evie, we will then be transferred to Melbourne where she will have a double lung transplant."
It's a journey which has already taken a toll on the entire family, and will continue to do so.
But the Pittsworth and District Campdraft Association, and the wider campdrafting community, are determined to help the apple of Barry Standing's eye, as a way to give back to a man who is always willing to lend a hand.
"Dad is a bit of a local hero, I suppose - he's always willing to help any organisation if anyone wants a hand with anything; Mum and Dad are always there, willing to give a hand and give 100 per cent," Mrs Smith said.
"I think the campdraft saw him struggling with Evie's diagnosis and thought he gives so much to the community, so how about we try and give him something.
"Mum and Dad just give and give and give, and they saw something that they could give back because he won't take anything, so we agreed to let them do the charity campdraft."
This weekend, campdrafters from all over will descend on the Pittsworth Showgrounds to take part in the Ride for Baz's Evie charity campdraft and gala dinner to raise funds for the family and hopefully ease some of the burden of battling such a disease.
A charity auction is also live on AuctionsPlus, closing on Saturday night, with donated offerings including impressive young colts from both Debbie Gesler and Ben and Jaye Hall; a 16-month-old gelding from Gwen MacMillan; stallion services and bull semen; horse training; beach holiday packages; a Border Collie working dog pup named Evie; and many more impressive donations.
"We're taken aback by everybody's generosity and how many lovely people are out there that are so willing to help," Mrs Smith said.
"Thank you just isn't enough. I don't know how you can put into words how grateful we as a family are to those people.
"In a year that was 2020 and was so full of heartache and uncertainty, you look at these kind of people who have donated, who have sent well wishes, the world is really a beautiful place."