 What is medicine, you know? It is a calendar. We went, remember? Granted, yeah, grand teetown also. I don't know if you so remember the bears and the, you know, baby bears. Yes. For all that, yeah. Thirty to sixty million buffalo was ranging on the land. Looks like I thought this is a miniature rhinoceros should keep up from somewhere in the dark. Okay now, do it now. Chuck, chuck, chuck. Okay. So you went to Fiji Mountains? All the different animals I heard, I saw. The Fiji Mountains, over from there we went to the medicine wheel on top of the mountain. One of the most spectacular rides that you can think of on the way to Yellowstone, then we came back. What is medicine wheel? Medicine wheel is on top of the mountain. It's more like a calendar, you know? A wheel with twenty-eight spokes. Well, it's unfortunately it's all very distorted now. But, you know, they put it on a place where there are no shadows, nothing. Where they could measure the moon's rise and moon setting and also maybe sunrise, sunset. Also probably for solstice, you know, solstice and equinox is very important in the Native American culture. So they put up this on top of a flat piece of mountain top, you know, like nothing else right on the top. Some nearly ten-thousand-plus feet above the sea level. So we went up a lot of riding and then, you know, this huge motorcycle, very hard to ride on the gravelly roads. So we somehow went up and saw that and... But the ride... I did ride up on gravel roads with such a heavy motorcycle. That was just about three miles, I think, three-four miles. But rest of it was a spectacular ride, absolutely. Incredible ride, any more cyclist dream, that kind of road. Then were you able to read the time or...? No, no, it's all distorted. It's not a watch, it is a calendar. Anyway, the moon rise was so absolutely miraculous yesterday. We were just riding down and the moon was coming up out of the mountains, unbelievable. Almost full moon today is full, but yesterday was almost full. Today we are at the Crow Tribe Reservation. So we meeting some people there having a conversation with one of their medicine men and then seeing a very important battle, which is one of the most, what to say, successful battles for the Native Americans, which was a little big horn battle where they killed General Costa, who was aspiring to become the president of United States. So we are visiting that and then having this conversation and then riding on towards building in Montana. What was that, that singular rock you sent photos of? I think you were there for a few days because over a couple of days you sent me photos from there. Matotipila. Matotipila. Unfortunately they call it Devil's Tower. It is a very unique, you know, like a volcanic formation. That's something strange happened. It just came up and froze right there. It didn't flow over, it's magma. But the Native American people believe it's an ancient tree that was chopped off. It's like a massive tree, a mammoth tree because it very much looks like a tree trunk. When you look at it, it definitely very much looks like a tree stump, you know. When trees are chopped, how it looks, it definitely looks like that. But, you know, tree of that size would have gone up what, 3000 feet up into the sky probably. But that's not it. It's a volcanic formation but incredibly powerful. I found some strange things about it. We spent some time in the night. I'll be talking about it in the next couple of days maybe, hopefully. Right now there's no time to sit and talk and record. So we're gathering everything that we can and we'll go sit somewhere and record. So Grand Teton Lake also we're going through that. We went to Yellowstone so many. Yeah, we went to Grand Teton also. I don't know if you so remember the bears and the, you know, baby bears or all that, yeah. Yes, and just right there like not even, we were on the side of the road and it was just like a few feet away. This is another animal which came near the house that day. I don't even know the animal's name. It starts with A, you may know that. It seems it spreads leprosy but it looks like a tiny rhinoceros. It suddenly came off. I was standing outside and I was taking a call. I was walking up and down on a call and I find these two animals just come out close to me. They're not even shy of coming wild animals. They're like, you know, like raccoons but with somewhat scaly. Looks like I thought this is a miniature rhinoceros. It came off from somewhere in the dark. Oh, an armadillo. Yeah, armadillo, that one. Armadillo, yeah. It seems it spreads. Oh yeah, I think you told me this. It was quite funny. I've never seen that animal before. Oh, you saw the bison. Yeah, yeah. We saw the bison buffalo roundup. It's called about 1500 bisons but I don't know. It made me very sad. Such glorious animals being treated like domesticated cows. I don't know. I didn't like it. The governor of South Dakota, she's a lady. She also rode along with the riders and all that stuff. Can you believe this at one time? Somewhere between 30 to 60 million buffalo was ranging on the land. And by the time they finished with it, probably early late 19th century, I think there were only 325 left. There's a very famous photograph of all the skulls just piled one on top of the other. Can you imagine from somewhere 50, 60 million buffaloes to 325, just 325? If they had killed them, there would be no bison left on the planet.