 So this is truly a very unique journey that we are going on. Most people have never heard about high-pointing before, and they probably never will throughout their lifetime. But there are some things that you come across that are just too good not to share. Well, pony! And so you re-art. I found out that there's a whole organization devoted to high-pointing. I mean, who knows? We have, you know, just a casual hiker, and we have experienced mountaineers, and we have some that just come from low income and some that have more money than they know what to do with it. Many of the high points you can drive to, or they're very short hikes, you don't have to be a super athlete to do them. Florida, when you go there, you go, oh, here I am at 345 feet, and you're like, woohoo! But yet, you know, it is a high point. It's one you have to get. We found out through some friends in the High Pointers organization that there was a mother-daughter team that wanted to be the first to climb the lower 48 states. Turns out that the only peak they don't have is Gannett Peak in Wyoming. It's probably the hardest of the lower 48 to climb. I was diagnosed with hip dysplasia January of 2013. I do have to get surgery next year, so it's kind of putting our nose to the grindstone this year trying to get Gannett Peak done. My stomach was churning as we were packing up. We knew this was going to be a difficult climb, but we wouldn't have sent our daughter on if we didn't think she could do it. It's never clear if we're going to reach the top. It just never is. We came around one bend, and there it was in all of its glory right in front of us. We're crossing through boulder fields that one slip can break a leg, sprain an ankle, dislocate a shoulder. Once you get out there, I think you just catch the bug, and there's no going back. There's always ways you can try everything possible until the end to make your dreams happen.