 We're out here practicing our vertical surface maneuvers, which is basically if there's ever a situation where someone is hiking or falls climbing or something on a mountain, we're able to extricate the survivor. Everything is standardized. So to me putting my seatbelt on when I get in a helicopter, to me taking it off, to me reaching around the guy, to everything is standard. So honestly, we train that so often. I'm really just more looking at the terrain that I'm in and trying to adjust for certain situations. Like sometimes they don't put me in the spot that they were going to or said they were going to. So you have to stay very focused in kind of the present moment of what's going on and all the other things that you have to be able to accomplish kind of have to be second nature to where you're not having to think about how do I take this thing off of, you know, the the strop off of the hook, route it around. All those things become second nature because you do it so much. This can happen in, you know, any vertical surface. So building sides, mountain sides would be able to put a helicopter in a situation to be able to get us down to the survivor and get them out of the bad situation.