 We're down here in Puerto Rico doing an annual gunnery training with our other detachment of the Puerto Rican National Guard. The particular focus for this training is the gunnery piece, the weapons themselves. Having the back seaters be able to work with the Puerto Ricans and their knowledge, they have a certain level of expertise because they were able to participate in a range like this more often than we are. Being able to lean into that and get our guys' familiarity with the weapons systems is invaluable and increases our level of training dramatically. It makes us able to do training like this up in New Hampshire and the surrounding areas at Fort Drone. So there's a master door gunner. He's been amazing with me being a brand new, steps aren't the colors any of us here in Puerto Rico. He's been doing this for ten years and now I just have an opportunity to come down here and figure out how he's kind of made this process seamless. He's been nothing but great help for me in the state of New Hampshire. Really happy about it. I'm excited. I feel pretty good being able just to keep training with our sister unit. We just came back from a deployment a year ago. We're in K-4 together. Just being able to continue doing joint training with them, creating that unique cohesion and bonding. It's a blessing for us. We're looking forward to make this a yearly event so we can keep doing it every year.