 So being a park ranger, I think is one of the best jobs out there. I never quite know what I'm going to be doing from day to day, but that's part of the excitement. The diversity of work encourages and fosters new learning and new growth. It's a very diverse job. You can go out on a patrol and think you're doing conservation work and then all of a sudden you're being pulled into an enforcement situation. You have to be quite adaptable. We do a lot of patrolling, various office duties. Facility management, so that's boardwalk building. We do lots of maintenance on pit toilets and stuff like that. We're always building something. Yeah, doing enforcement of the park act, so trying to gain voluntary compliance, sometimes issuing written tickets or written warnings. We respond to emergency situations, whether that be someone's injured themselves in the backcountry and you're the first on scene to assist. I'd say for park rangers you've got to be well rounded, so to speak. I'd say a general good staple is to have chainsaws are needed everywhere in parks, just a general good understanding of what wildlife is in the area. Construction or dealing with the public or operating boats, operating equipment. As well as just your kind of prerequisite courses, so whether you're from any diploma or a natural resource degree. Some other skills that BC park rangers benefit from having are empathy, teamwork and patience. We're always working with many different groups, so we've got lots of BC parks volunteers that we work with. We work with lots of First Nations groups as well, and we have great park operators that help manage lots of our provincial parks. I might be a little bit biased, but I think it is one of the best jobs in the world. We're protecting and preserving some of the most beautiful environments that the province has to offer. It is physically demanding, sometimes mentally for sure, but it is great and it's all worth it.