 Hey everybody! We're excited to be here with you guys today to talk about one place studies. It's a very popular topic amongst genealogists. If you don't know me, I'm Aywin from Forest Alpha Wiki Tree. Below me is Julie. She's one of our team members and here to help with questions. And then our guest star for today, someday I'll do that in a minute, is Azure Robinson. She's one of our project leaders and she is a co-leader of our one place studies project. So that's why we have her here to talk to us. So how are you guys doing? Really good. Another beautiful day here. Yep, same here. Good. We've got people from all over it looks like joining us. Ireland, Texas, the Netherlands, Los Angeles, New Hampshire. Fantastic. Great to see everybody. We've got a lot of corners of the world covered this morning. Lots of places to have one place studies. Yeah, tomorrow. Yep, tomorrow. If we have any people from New Zealand, it's tomorrow. So, which is always so in Germany. Welcome, Francis and Heather in Illinois. My name is American. Azure and I are neighbors. That's right, you are. In the same state, anyway. In New Mexico. Ruth is here from England. North-east England. Washington State, Mary. Very cool. Well, we're here to talk about one place studies. So how about we jump into one place studies and we'll just start with the most obvious question, Azure. What is a one place study? All right. That's a question a lot of people have asked. So let me just read right from Wikipedia has a great article on what a one place study is. It's basically focusing on a building, single road, village, community, town and studying the people that lived there. So that's that's basically what it is. We're in, Wicked Tree is all about genealogy. So that's what we're doing here is the genealogy of in history of a specific place. Yeah, that's really cool. I think sometimes people hear place and they think just like a town or a village or location. But like that was saying it can also be a building, a house. Yeah. And just recently we added that a cemetery can be also is a place study. So that's kind of a joint venture between the two projects on Wicked Tree now is the cemetery global cemetery project and one place studies. Nice. That seems like a big collaboration. Yeah. So since you brought it up, what is the one place study project that we have on Wicked Tree? So Wicked Tree has basically right now we have 199 members and just this year since the beginning of the year we've added 23 new studies. Wow. So that's really exciting. Yeah and all over the place. Can you name a couple of them just for interest? Yeah, let me pull that up. There's another Illinois person. Two more. So one, oh I'm sorry. No, go ahead. We have one of the newest ones is in Castle Vieri, Lazio. I hope I'm saying that right in Italy. Oh, nice. And we have one in Randolph, Oregon. And we have a House History Chapman Farmhouse in New York State. Oh, cool. Yeah. And we have one in West Chiltington, Sussex. So there's an England one. And then we have Skil, Gannabin, Entrum. So that's Ireland there for you. So we have them all over the place. That's awesome. Yeah. And oh another one I just wanted to mention that Emma, our project leader for the Black Heritage Project started one for Africa Town, Alabama. So that was a new one this year as well. Very cool. That's great. I didn't realize we had so many all over the place. That's exciting. I know, exactly. And I might be starting a house study as well because I had somebody contact me about a gentleman that I created a profile for and she lives in his house, the house that he built back in the early 1900s. Awesome. So she contacted me to see if she could find out more about him and his family. So we may be starting a one-place study for that house. That is cool. Yeah, it's really interesting. We've had a couple houses come up during the wiki tree challenge that sounds like they have really interesting history. So it would be fun to do things like that. I was just going to actually ask this question. Layla wants to know what would you do for a one-place study for a house? What kind of information would you include? Yeah, so I have one that is for a building in New York, Brooklyn. And it's basically all the records that you can find. And you want to talk to the local libraries for that location because you can find property records for it and see who owned it when. And so that's what you're doing. You're basically studying the history of that location. Who lived there? Who died there? Who was born there? The people who passed through there. So it's newspaper articles, whatever records you can get your hands on. So fun. Yeah, that would be cool. We just did an Oliver Wakeman challenge. There was a story about a train station and I was able to find all this information on the train station. And so in the back of my mind, I was like, I need to go back and do a free space page for this train station because there was so much interesting stuff about it. Exactly. That's what's really fun about it. And with WikiTree, the ability to have categories, and with a one place study, we have the sticker. So you add that sticker to the profiles, those person profiles. So you can then, once you have people categorized to that location, you can check your connections. You can see all the people that live there. It's a great way to navigate. Our category feature is really cool. I mean, there's so many ways you can pull people together and you might find connections that you just didn't know existed. And the one place study is a good example of that. Yeah, it's really fun. Yeah. So how does someone, if someone wants to have a one place study on WikiTree and join the project, how did they go about doing that? So we have a G2G post out for it. So there's a couple different ways you can navigate to that. You can go to help and then projects and see the listing on the project page there and click into the project, you know, the project page, which gives you the link to the welcome post. And I can share my screen. Yeah, that would be great. So that. I think it's the find menu that that's on. Yeah. We have a question about the building that you're, that the one place study was started for in Brooklyn. Okay. Let me show the. Yeah, let's do the how to join a project first and then we can do the question. So here's, this is my navigation homepage. So if you just go to help and then I'm sorry find and then projects is how you can get to all of our projects on WikiTree. If you just scroll down the first section is under geographical, but we're going to go down to topical projects. And it's just right here under one name studies. And if you click on the link up here for that takes you to our project page. And this just gives a brief outline about what is a one place study. And it talks about tags that you can follow on social media. If you're on social media, so you can kind of keep abreast of news going on. And then right, right here it has answer our D2G welcome post. So that's where you would go in and answer the post for it. And just let us know what what location you want to study. And we'll get that we set that up for you. And then add you to the trusted list for that page and you go on from there. We have a template we start out with and then you can fill in the information. So just to clarify, they joined through the join post on GDG and then the project leaders set up the free space page. Yes. So it has like the basic stuff to get started and then add that person to it so they can. Yeah, so that's part of the part of the post here is asking the new person to send a send us a private message so we have their email address so we can get them added to the new page that we're creating for them. We have a couple questions that have popped up while you were doing that. Let me show the the one that was asked about in Brooklyn real quick. Let's see. Here we go. So this is just an address in Brooklyn Columbia Heights. And so it's Oh pictures. Yeah, yeah, that's awesome. So this is what we start out with. You know, I researched who lived there the earliest records I could find for this location and go from kind of go from there build up from there. Um, and it's two two buildings are two street numbers together because the property now is 120 122 124 Columbia Heights. So but this shows what it was at the beginning. And then I have the population as far as I can find it for the different senses and going forward from there. That's awesome. This is where I'm at right now in it. I'm done up to I'm involved in doing the 1930 census. As far as I could tell there are about 197 people there at the time. So Yeah, so that's basically what you do with one, you know, one building. As you can see, it was really cool. I worked with a librarian at the Brooklyn Library and got some records about old Brooklyn Heights, New York's first suburb, and it shows it's a directory way back, you know, 1843. So it was really very interesting learning all about that. Yeah, that's very cool. Very cool. J.M. from the Netherlands would like to know if we have a presence on our Discord server for the one place studies. Do we have a conversation going on out there? Yeah, so once you've been assigned the badge, there's a channel that will open up on Discord. And that's that's where we have all of the members of one place. Cool project. Very cool. And then William, William Vincent asks, do all locations in one place studies currently exist? So could you do an historical place? I think is what he's asking. Yeah, you can do any location, basically. And right on the project page here, you can see what, sorry, what free space page already exists, what locations we already have projects going for. So you can search first, but you can search by country or you can search by the name. So you can see these are all the places that we have place studies going on right now. Cool. That's great. And then if you scroll down further, it takes you down to the actual listing of all the one place studies. Again, we're back in the categories. And then Ruth Jowett, I'm sorry, go ahead. No, go for it. I say Ruth Jowett was asking how small can you go with the place? And as we were just talking about a house, but she was mentioning that her great-grandfather and his brother were in an orphanage and that, I think orphanages are an excellent place to study. Oh, that would be so neat. If somebody did a study for an orphanage, that would be really very interesting. The connections there. Yeah, yeah, exactly. So yeah, I can imagine somebody can get lost in an orphanage pretty easily. Oh yeah, for sure. I have a great aunt who has been, her parents died, well her mom died when she was young and then their dad split, but she had some issues and so she was in this asylum for children that had issues. And I looked at it a couple of times and there were some really interesting people like I looked at where they become as adults. And just it would be really interesting to do one for the kids that were there. Yeah. So I guess I slightly misunderstood William's question. He wanted to know if there are places, OPSs for places that no longer exist, which is kind of what I meant by historical places. So a place that, you know, a town that used to exist that maybe was disbanded or was loved by another. Great segue. So here's a, here I'll show you one that I actually did. It's for Dawson, New Mexico. And it's a ghost town. It no longer exists. So it's a perfect example of what he's talking about. So yes, these are definitely places that we can, you know, we'd like to have. Very interesting places out there. This is a mining town, not very far away from where I'm at. And it had two mining explosions that occurred. And so lots of, you know, loss of life. And I think that's part of what caused the town to kind of shut down by 1950s. So, but yeah, that's what this one is all about. It's a historic town. That's very cool. And again, you know, locating these places that might have shown up on the census that aren't there anymore, it just helps for people to, again, make more connections. Yeah. And so that's one thing I just wanted to mention, too, is that you can see here. So here's the sticker I was talking about for this study that you can add to the profiles of the people who lived there. And it will add the category. You can see here, here's the wiki markup for it. It'll add the category for you to that person profile. So if you click on categories, and you go to that one place study category, you can see right now there's only 41 profiles, but here they are. Nice. Put them all in there for you. That's awesome. And if the page was set up correctly to begin with, the link will work on the person profile to take people back to the actual space page. If, so, for members who were set up a while ago, and it wasn't quite set up correctly, all they have to do is just send me a message and I can get that fixed up for them. Okay. Because what it is, it's the format of the page has to be set correctly for the sticker to work. So that's why we have the project leader set up the space page to begin with. So that makes sense. Yeah. That kind of explains the reason behind that. Also, if somebody needs to, you know, if they're no longer on wiki tree anymore, they had to leave for some reason or something happened, they're no longer participating. We like to have the project be a co-profile manager so that then that can be, you know, managed on the back end better. Yeah. Yeah. So AOIN set us up with a project profile so that we can have that. So if somebody has a one-place study that's an older study, all they need to do to add that, we're asking you to add that. So here's one, I removed it and now I'm going to show how to add the one-place study project as a profile manager. So you just go into the privacy tab and you scroll down to add to the trusted list. And if you just add the email address for the one-place study project to that, and it's a wt1placestudiesatgooglegroups.com and I'll make sure that that's on the project page. And then just click add this person. Then you need to scroll back down one more time and go to the trusted list and add as manager. And that'll add one-place study as a co-profile manager. Perfect. Very cool. Yeah. So another sticker on this study page is the one-place society for one-place studies sticker, showing that this study is registered with that society. So that's something we just got set up with the society recently. And the society is a great place to check out. They have great resources. If you want to become a member and register your study, they're great people to work with. They're also, I'll go ahead. Is it free to register your study? No, there is a fee to join, but it's, you can't remember how much it was. Let's see. Oh, here we go. So $15. That's not bad. And you can register how many ever studies you have. So you can register. It doesn't have a limit. I imagine that expands your audience too, so you might get input from more people. Exactly. So here they have a page here on what the benefits of joining are and that is one of the main benefits is being able to work, get feedback from other people, and a great, great community to be a part of there. Yeah, they've been really supportive of us too. Yeah. We had another question pop up. Oh, I'm sorry. Go ahead, finish up. Oh, that's okay. Yes, I just was going to say that there's a page on Wikitree for the society for one-place studies. We have a presence there for them. Janet Berry is one of their chairpeople. So you can kind of check out, here's the sticker again, and that's the code for it. And then here's their links. Oh, that's fantastic. That's great. Yeah. Nice that you set up that partnership there. That's great. So Betsy was asking if we had a map of all of the one-place studies that are currently in existence. Okay. I'm going to guess maybe not, but I think it looks like there's maps related to each individual place, or is there a global map? The map that, Alash is, you know, that map, there's that map that, you know, they're part of. Which map is that map? Well, the Wikitree map, the, the category map, the, yeah, where you can look at categories on, sorry, I'm going on Alash's, on Alash's mapping app. Yes. Oh, okay. Okay. You can, you can see, because all, all of the one-place studies have that category. Okay. Have this category. So you can see where all the, all of them are. Does that make sense? Yeah. It would be cool if we could have that, like, on this. Where is his map? Where people could just click real quick to see here. Yeah. Yeah. I'll have to add that in there. Yeah. Yeah. That'd be great. I always forget, oh, it's in apps, right? Help apps. There's a map thing. It should be, I think so. Cemetery mapping. No, find apps. It's always on the find menu. For some reason, I, oh, yeah, I thought for sure it was here, but it's not. I'm totally drawing a blank on where to go. Oh, let me see. That's okay. Carry on. I'll see if I can find it. Okay. Yeah. Just, yeah, having a link to that where people can just click on the project page or whatever. That's a great idea. Well, she's doing that. Maybe you can tell us, social media is such a big thing these days. So how can people incorporate social media with their one-place study? Yeah. So let me go ahead and bring up my Twitter here. So there are, oh, here we are. So there's a hashtag for One Place Wednesdays that you can check out and add to your post. If you make a post about your one-place study, just add that. There's also the one-place studies hashtag you can add. So that's a good way. And just to, if you follow that tag, you can see what else is going on in the community around that. Oh, yeah. And some good places to follow on Twitter and Facebook and Instagram is Society for One Place Studies. And then One Place Studies Directory is a free directory out there. If you want to, if you have a study, you can get it registered on there. It's really easy. And there's actually a, we have a space page for them here. Martin White is actually a Wiki Tree member and a one-place study project member who actually created the site and manages it. Oh, nice. Yeah. So we even have a sticker you can add. It's not a sticker. I'm sorry. It's just a little image that you can add to your study so that you can say that you're registered on there. And he has quite a few registered. So it's, it's a great community too. He posts whenever somebody's new added, he usually makes a post on social media that he's added them. So, nice. That's a great way to get some attention. Yeah. Yeah. Very cool. So update on the map app. Okay. I couldn't find it right away, but I'll talk, or one of us can talk to Alash and see about getting them incorporated into your category pages. That'd be great. While we're still talking about categories, Julie, do you have a cemetery category up? I do. I just wanted to show my connections and my cousin features that you can do now because it's really cool, especially for one place studies. Yes. Very handy feature to be able to see who you're related or connected to in the area. Yeah. I was really surprised on one of my studies, the one I'm doing for Bertone where I live. When I used that feature, I was surprised at how many people I'm related to here. Yeah. Right? Yeah. Amazing. I know. It's fun. I just like to go to random categories where it's like I shouldn't have anything there, and I still find connections and relationships. It's really cool. Well, it's interesting that you said that, Aon, because this is a cemetery that I started documenting. It's just down the road for me, and I shouldn't be related to anybody in here. This is not my hometown. I don't have any people here. Yeah. But you'll notice there's a my connections button up here. So if I click that, we'll see that I do have some ancestors and cousins in the cemetery. Wow. They're quite distant, of course, but we're still connected. Yeah. So it's kind of a fun feature on our category pages that you can do that now. You can go into any category and find any of your, see if you're related to anybody there, which will give you a path to go back and check in your research and make sure that all those connections are correct. Yeah. But I haven't done a one-name study on this yet. One place. I'm sorry. One place. Thank you. You should. Sorry. I'm just trying to confuse everybody. So are there any other kinds of maybe one-place studies that people haven't thought about, that we haven't talked about? It kind of seems to me that if it's a location, it can be a one-place study. Yeah. Or if it was a location at one time, then it's you know, a one-place study. Yep. Definitely. Yeah. Yeah, it's so interesting. Now I just want to not work and go do a bunch of one-place studies. I've thought of like 12 different ones while I'm in sitting here. It's like, like, I can do that one. Exactly. Yeah. It's very distracting. So our audience out here or anybody thinking that they are going to run out and start a one-place study today? Or did we answer all your questions? Do you have more for Azure? JM said a certain company would make a great one-place study too. That's absolutely sure. Or true. Yeah. Yeah. See how distracted I am? I can't make sentences. Chris Freyala might go make his fourth one-place study. I know he's doing what? Won in Italy. He's got the Haverhill, Massachusetts one. And he's got two actually in Italy. I'm not going to try to pronounce the names. But yeah. Yeah, I have another ghost town that kind of got me started in one-place studies. Andersonia, California is a ghost town. And it's through my uncle, his family is the one that actually is who it's named after. And so that's kind of what got me started and it is getting that all set up. Nice. Yeah. It's really cool. So what would be your first step then, Azure, if you were going to start researching a place like that, what would be your first step? I would just go first and check and see if it's already being covered. Maybe you can join the person who's got that study going already. So that would be my first step just to check first to make sure it's not already being done. And that next kind of start gathering some information to see what all would be involved in doing a study of that one place. Make sure you can take that on. These little these ghost towns that have kind of a limited amount of population were a little easier to kind of get started for me. But yeah, just making sure you can take on the bandwidth of it. And then the one-place project, Page, has some great resources on starting a one-place study, what to do, how to get started. And some of those resources are actually from the Society of One Place Studies. And some of those resources are free for anybody to check out. So I definitely would recommend checking out the documentation that we have out there on starting, getting that started. They have a page, the basics of doing a one-place study, choosing a place. They have a document out there for free on that. Christy Gray has some YouTube videos, one-place study from scratch, and reconstructing a community. So those are some things that I would recommend doing. And then go ahead and if somebody's ready, just go ahead and answer that join post. Jeff had had some good questions. You've kind of covered some of this already, but how do you know if a place is a good candidate for an OPS and what characteristics of a place might you look for? Is that easy enough to answer? I think every, I mean, it'd be great to have a one-place study for everywhere, but you know, basically, if you have an interest in that place or connection, that to me would be kind of the starting point and something to draw you in. But I don't think there would be a restriction other than you don't want to take on too big of a place. It'd be better to start small with a building or a street study. Yeah, you don't want like a Texas one-place study. Yeah, exactly. Or even a county. A county's really too big because it's multiple cities. It'd be better to do one small village at a time or even a neighborhood at a time. Can I stack them? I saw this debated a little while ago, I think if I remember right, but like a street, just doing a street can be a one-place study. Yeah, a street study, yep. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, so definitely that would be my only kind of like, let's try to keep it manageable size. And then, yeah, what was the second part of the question again? I'm sorry. What characteristics of a location would you look for? I think it might differ depending on what kind of location it is. Yeah, and what you're interested in personally, I mean, what keep you interested in going, you know, on working on it, basically. Right. But yeah, one of the first things I did was search through some newspapers and see if there are some historical events that happened around that place. That's a good thing to kind of get you started maybe, learning more about it. Yeah, you mentioned the mining disasters in the one coast town that you were looking at. That would be a good starting point. Yeah, and so that's another kind of joint relationship is a worldwide disasters project, you know, checking in with other projects to see where the connections are and linking in with them. Yeah, let's see. Liza in found a place in Quebec that she's working on. She contacted somebody who had already started a one-place study. Yeah, I guess they're working together on that. That's great. I'd love to have some help if anybody wants to help. I'd love to have any help. I think we've inspired Ruth to dig into her orphanage there. That's fantastic. Yeah, that's a nice, it seems like, you know, 218 people is a nice, they'll keep you busy for a while, but it's also manageable. Yeah, the one I started with Andersonia, it's fairly small too. It's under 100 people. And so I was also, one of the next phases I did in it was make sure that they're all connected to the tree. And so they're, all but two are connected to the tree now. So, wow. Very cool. Yeah, there was just two people are, you know, they just, I couldn't find, they were like brick walls of themselves. That's what I like about doing this though, because a lot of times you'll find people in a location that are working as a laborer, they might be a boarder in somebody else's house, and they don't have, you don't know their origins. And so somebody might be out there looking for them. And if you create a profile for them and start researching them on your own, then if you just never know what kind of doors you're going to open up for somebody else. Exactly. Like the first, that, that Brooklyn location, the first few families that lived there, they had servants and from Ireland and names Mary and, you know, the really common names. And so, you know, I went through every single one and ruled out the ones that were already on WikiTree, but I created the profile and just went to town on the research notes with everything I had on that person because you never know, somebody might be looking for that ancestor. Yeah. So anyway, yeah, that's what it's all about. Very cool. So, so Susan sounds like she's a little bit stuck for right now. She started an OPS for Chebacca Parish in Massachusetts. Okay. Contacted somebody, never heard back, so she doesn't really know what to do next. Can you give her some pointers? Yeah, I'll, I'll check. It doesn't sound familiar, but I'll check back through the join post and see, see where that's at. I'll write it down for you. Thanks. Yeah, Susan, can you, what, can you give us your profile ID too? Just so we, yeah, don't have to... Then, yeah, then, then Azure can get a hold of you. Narrow it down a little bit more. Yeah, we'll get, we'll get back to you on that, definitely. I just want to, do I have to do anything else today besides starting a one-place study? Nope, it's Wednesday. It's all about one place. I really want to go do that. I have so many rabbit holes that are waiting for me to trip and fall in. Oh man, I'm kidding. Okay, I've got, I've got your ID, Susan. We'll make sure that somebody gets in touch with you about that. Rolf wants to know how small should a city be? Maybe if it's a big city, narrow it down to a street? Yeah, that's a really good question because somewhere like Manhattan, that would be, that would be a lot to take on. So it would, it's better in especially cases like that to definitely start in a small area. So a street study would be great. Or even in that case, a building, because those buildings by themselves are, that's a lot of people that have lived there over the years. So, he just reminded me of a house that I discovered up in Wisconsin where some of my Swedish relatives that who immigrated to the America ended up. It's, it's a long story that I won't pour you with, but I could do a one-place study on the house. Exactly. Julie's going to start at six, one of the studies today. Well, and it's really, you know, just like, just like the one member mentioned, I can't remember her name. She just mentioned about joining somebody else who already had the study started. That's a great, you know, if you have it set up, you know, you can draw more people in and, and definitely make a post out on social media about it, because maybe there's somebody out there who hasn't heard about Wikipedia yet, but they see this post about this location where they're interested in the history of it. So. Right. Yeah. And so you can divide up the tasks and somebody can focus on this and somebody can focus on that. Yep. That's elaborate genealogy. What about doing a family in a place as a one place study? Or maybe a surname? Yeah. So that, that would just be a, I think that would be a one name, one name study. Because of the place what you would want, you wouldn't want to narrow it down that to just that person, that place is more than that, that family name. So I think at that point you'd want to focus, if that's your interest to focus on the one name study aspect of it, or maybe do both. Yeah. One name in one place. Yep. Yeah. So Rolf says that his mother comes from a town in Germany back to the late 1600s, and there's not just one street, of course. How could he focus in on, on managing that if the, if the town, I mean, if the town's a manageable size, he could still do it. Oh yeah. So that's Oh yeah. So just, if you want to just focus on, focus on it down. We were mainly talking about just huge town, you know, huge cities. And that would be, you know, like a metropolis would be too big. Right. Too many people to try to manage. But something like a town like that, that would be, that's fine. That's perfect. There's all quite a few one place studies that are from, you know, old towns back in the, in Europe. And that's definitely manageable. You're getting a lot of good questions here. If you are going to do an OPS for a small town, what is a good way to keep track of the buildings and houses in the town that you have researched? Yeah. So your space page is a great place for that. If you need to have like supplemental pages to your, your main study page, that's, you know, definitely something you can do and just link into it. There are different ways you can kind of set that up. The Bethel house study that I was sharing earlier, the 122124. So what I've got is I've got for those years when there were more than a hundred people there, I've got a page for that census year. So a free space page for that census year and a listing of the people that are there. So it makes it more manageable, breaking it out that way. I can share that real quick. Sure. So you've got it set up as kind of a network of pages then that all come from the main free space page. Yep. Let me show you real quick what that kind of looks like because that's a lot. So back down here in the population section where I've got the residents listed out, down here where it starts in 1910, I've got a space page starting from then. I've got a space page for each of these census years because it's New York, there's 1915 and 1925 census also. So that's what this looks like. So this one I'm all done. I've added everybody who's in this census record for this location. So I've got their profile linked to the name on the census for them and it's a table. If somebody needs help setting up a table, they can just send me a note. There's also a website tool that makes it really easy to create a table too so I can share that if anybody's interested. But that's how I would break it out just by you know, a census year if you want to do it that way or you could do it by maybe my streets. You could have a different space page by street. Oh, good idea. I think that might help Rolf. Yeah. However, you kind of want to break it up that works for you. And then Kathy is asking what would be the maximum size of a place that you'd want to do a study on? I think you have to kind of ask yourself that question. I mean you wouldn't want to go as big as like we were talking about. You wouldn't want to go as big as Manhattan but you need to think about how much can I take on myself? What's my bandwidth? And that's what we were talking about starting small, starting with maybe a building that you haven't interested in and then you can build up from there if that's something that you see that you're able to take on. Does that make sense? That's to me. Yeah, I think it would be really easy to get in over your head and I think like some place like a larger city like that it would be like you said, I love the idea of putting together a table with the different streets. Yeah. And then if you can get people to join you on that study then you know everybody could take a different street. Exactly. Yeah. Yay Ruth. All right, Ruth, great. We'll get you all set up after the live cast here. Great to have you join us. It's free. Why not do it? Why not? All it takes is time, right? Yeah, just that same time. Yeah, I'll have plenty of that. Sure. Speaking of time. Oh, I'm sorry. Speaking of time, we're coming up on about an hour. I really enjoyed this, Azure. I learned a lot because I haven't told you guys. Yeah, I'm really glad that we were able to do this. Yeah, for sure. And I guess the thing to remember is to just take it a bite at a time. You don't have to do the whole thing all at once. Just break it up into pieces and stay organized. Jaycee says she's apparently been doing one informally. All right. Well, let's get it. Get it formalized. Get it formalized, man. Do it. That's great. Well, Azure, I'm glad you're the project leader for One Place Studies. You and Amy, who unfortunately couldn't be here today. But you guys are awesome. Oh, thanks. I appreciate you doing this live cast, for sure. And maybe we can even link this to the project page. Yeah, definitely. Great idea. Yes. Most definitely, so that people can watch it. So anything else before we go? I think that's it. That was everything. All right. Thanks, we can see you. Thank you. Thanks, everybody.