 Yeah, so I'm Tech Sergeant Damon Notstein, I'm a combat camera craftsman here at the first combat camera squadron. So Exercise Green Goblin is, it's an annual exercise that we conduct here at the first combat camera squadron to really test and hone our skill sets in no light and low light conditions so that we can provide that basically like the you're here kind of perspective to DOD and joint leaders. Our cadre, we plan these exercises like months in advance so that we can kind of provide the most realistic training experience that we can. So we kind of try to work through like a crawl-walk run phase. So there's going to be some classroom stuff where they're going to learn different things from experts that have been out in the field, then they're going to actually get their hands on the equipment where the cadre work and give like instant feedback while they're doing different like sensitive site exploitation, workflow, different things with evidence collection under red light conditions and then lastly what we're really excited about is integrating with EOD. So those teammates are going to come over here in bed with our Comcam team and then they're going to ruck to a different location and go through some of these exercises that we're going to actually go through earlier in the week so it's going to be really exciting. Hopefully they enjoy it and don't really have a bad time. So at the first we provide senior DOD and joint leaders that directed imagery capability in support of strategic operational and planning requirements which basically means that we acquire still and motion imagery in support of air, sea and ground military operations. And since military operations don't stop when the sun goes down we have to ensure that every single member of our team is a technical expert in those no light and low light conditions so that we can actually provide those that imagery whether it's historical record or if it's battlefield assessment. So that's why we conduct exercise like Green Goblin it's necessary and it's definitely important for our team members. So in expeditionary environments we aren't really granted the opportunity to take our time to think through challenges it kind of has to be like second nature, right? So these kinds of exercises kind of put us in that mindset to where we're not only flexing like our skills but we're flexing our mental capacity to be able to process stressful situations so we can see what's happening in front of us, assess it quickly, react correctly and then provide that imagery that we need to do.