 I'm Keenan Zimmerman from Kamloops, based out of Kamloops IA. Here we got a little chance to do something a little different, as opposed to doing our regular wildfire gig. Something as new as this, you get used to doing wildfire, but you come into this and everybody's fresh. The biggest reward is just working with different organizations and pretty much coming together, figuring out how to do it right, and then just seeing those fish get over. We've got multiple sites around here. We're on site one, beach one, and I'm coordinating the helicopters back and forth for moving the fish. We're lucky enough to get a couple saining crews here from different areas. Generally what happens is that they'll have a big net on the back of their boat. They're going to do a loop around the river. We're going to pull it in, and the bottom is a lead line. It's a heavy line. The top line is corks. We kind of keep that lead line low along the bottom of the river bed, prevent any fish from getting out from underneath. We'll bring it into the beach, and we'll just pretty much scoop the fish all together, get them into those pens and in the buckets as quick as we can. Typically turn around times will be four minutes, so we'll get a sane in, we'll put them in the bucket, and then we'll send them off, so we have about four minutes until that next bucket. Typically, you're going to be doing around two sains an hour, so you can expect the helicopter to come anytime between five to maybe even 15 times per hour, depending on how many fish we're getting. We've got people in the background welding, fixing buckets that are broken, repairing and making new pens for the fish. This is pretty new to everybody, and different organizations coming together, so I think everybody has really got a good understanding of how much it means to everybody, especially the First Nations, getting those fish over and spawning successfully, and do everything we can to make sure that these runs continue to be successful.