 So, every time we get money saved, as far as the first stage, the city helped, I mean they done 99% of the work, and the next stage, you know, we have the sign coming up in this picnic area, and the next is the static display. So every time, I mean, just to show the appreciation for the people in the community, we actually, I mean, it's just, it's big stages coming into this area, because I mean, you come into Poclos first thing you're going to see, so we've got to make sure it looks as best as possible coming in, and the memorial itself, it has, there's obliques tablets that are on there from World War II to Iraq and Afghanistan, and all those names that are on there are people that have died in combat. So, I mean, you got, it's an emotional for, like, I was an Iraqi freedom, and I mean, six months before it left, there was a guy that was killed while I was training to go there, and he was from here, that a guy that I went to high school with that I knew personally, and those are hard hits whenever you're getting ready to go. You don't realize actually what's, you know, what's really going on. You're doing all this training and stuff, and then you actually realize, oh, I may not come back from this. So it's, I mean, it's, it's hard. It's hard to take in. This memorial needs to know that there's sacrifice that they give off, so we can get together like this, and we can actually meet all these organizations like the Rotary Club, Rotary Club helped us with this. I mean, it's, it's good, and it just shows us thanks for the community for letting us put this here. They can put this on top of a hill somewhere, but they actually put it in a pinnacle as soon as you go into town. That's what they receive first. So I mean, it just means a lot to us that we have that support from the community. I'm here today because my husband was a member of this post. He passed away 16 months ago today. He was a, he was a, he was a desert storm vet. He's been heavily involved with the VFW for years in Winchester and transferred his membership up here. We've been involved with the VFW post here since the inception of this memorial park. And my husband is a native from Pikeville. His daddy is a member of this post. This means a lot to our family. What this community and this VFW in particular does for its veterans really outshines a lot of organizations that we have been a part of. The fact that, you know, the city donated this property so that the veterans of this community could be recognized. You know, the VFW started selling the bricks. Little did we know that we were buying a brick to keep my husband in everybody's memory. This is, this is a wonderful thing that you have here to recognize the service and the ultimate sacrifice that these men and women have made for this community and this country. And it goes without saying, you know, how much we love and appreciate everything that they do and have done and are doing for us.