 12 o'clock in this position, you've got a prominent saddle, that saddle there is our axis for the gunman. What we'll do is we'll take some shots at the snow bank and then we'll walk down and we'll see what damage it's done. This position is burning in the field, hard packed snow, it's pretty much your only option. Your target is up and hold! Exercise cold response is an amazing opportunity for key NATO partners to come together in the most challenging environment of the high north and prepare for contingencies and learn to work together. And what we'll see is a strong maritime task group, task force, airplay and then some land exercises. And we'll see many, many nations coming together from the UK to the Norwegians, the French, the Germans and the Italians. So it's going to be an incredible opportunity and I'm certainly looking forward to it. NATO as an alliance needs to be ready for anything, ready for all environments. And it's essential for us to support Norwegian partners to be able to operate in the Arctic and that's why we train here so often. The Marines in the UK are one of two very high-readness formations and we really are the tip of the spear for the conventional UK force. And we take that responsibility really clearly because we need to exploit the maritime flank, we need to open theatres for others, be out there gaining understanding and intelligence, being ready for crisis and then ready to contribute to the fight. And that's something that we take seriously every day. The temperature and the weather, obviously the biggest challenge out here. Facted in with everything else as well, but that specifically, especially out on the water because we've got the wind chill as well as obviously the water that freezes instantly as well. And if we're heading off down the fjord at a boat group at like 30 knots into a 30-knot wind, it can quickly become down to minus 60 plus. So we've got to take that into consideration as well. Training here and always just brings the best out of people as well. Pulling together, you've got to check each other off constantly, call it the buddy-buddy system. Everything you do, you constantly check it, make sure no one's got any skin showing so there's no potential cold weather injuries there. But just being resilient out here, you've got to have mental toughness to sort of carry on with the task as well as dealing with all the conditions out here. You'll deal with it the same way we deal with any situation. You just adapt to make the best of what you've got and get on with it and everyone pulls together to achieve what they need to achieve.