 Today's training was a series of live voice events with a possible transfer of patients and picking up patients from a non-standard health age of one. This training is imperative to test our individual and collective tasks as a unit and ensure that in a vast array of scenarios we're ready to respond to any medical emergency and provide the best level of patient care we can. We have some really professional soldiers, pilots, medics and non-ray crew members within our formation and they perform exactly how you would expect them to under duress and in a typical training environment. Night operations bring a whole series of additional stressors on the individual crew and on the medics as well. You have a limited field of view, the visibility gets degraded, you don't really have a good contour of the ground so it's very stressful to fly at night and it's harder to find the inventory or the AXPs. We operate in the night on a regular basis as medibac units so we must be prepared to handle those situations which is why we train it. This scenario is designed to show that we can work with U.S. ground forces and transport them to foreign hospitals that fall within NATO. So for example we took patients today from our ground units and moved them to a Bulgarian military hospital where they were seen by Bulgarian military personnel. This shows that we're dedicated to our NATO allies and that we can work together on a regular basis.