 I'll never forget standing up in the back of the plane for the first time and being in the back of the stick and hearing that whoosh sound exiting the aircraft and thinking like oh my god was that somebody, that was somebody jumping out of the plane. I spent my time as a platoon commander in the infantry and had a blast doing it. I mean there's nothing better than having a platoon and training and going through deployment and seeing them be successful. I always saw recon, the units that we work with, including my platoon sergeant now working with those platoons and seeing the capabilities that those guys had. Which really inspired me and I wanted of course to keep doing something better and better and better. You know I knew if I didn't do it I'd regret it so I signed up. If you want it to be that way and you want to work and stay busy there's great opportunities out there. I've got to go to so many places, I've got to go to the combatant diver course, I've got to jump with the team in the advanced Hayhoe package that we do in Arizona. And then I continue to be operational and be able to do those things with the platoon and the teams and do a lot of different types of mission sets that I never thought I'd be able to do. Roger Tango. I believe for a training area it's a large open training area with pretty decent spots for drop zones. It's also in a pretty rural area there's not too much around there. It gives the Marines something different to train to, a new area, a new environment. It's totally unlike Okinawa out here. So it was a big deal, it was a big milestone for us to hit in Yatsubetsu and then Hokkaido in general. No units have conducted freefall training up here before. Looking out the back of an airplane, about to jump out of it at anywhere from 15,000 to say 20,000 feet, not going to lie it's definitely a little bit nerve-wracking. It's one of the best feelings you'll ever have.