 So we were working with the cadets from the Royal Thai Army Military Academy for about six months on our last rotation, force-packaged 23-1. I had a team of two other advisors with me. We spent four months with them at their military academy in Nakhon-Nayok, Thailand, and then we spent two months with them in Loparee at Camp Erawan working with the cadets and the Third Special Forces Regiment, specifically the Ranger Training Team. Yeah, exactly. Perfect. Just like that. We think that the Airsoft is our family, that they will tell us and teach us the good things and the better, the quick way, how to match the Thai way with the American way so we can work together. The cadets are extremely hungry for this win. The tempo and pace that they approached their train up with was extremely impressive. They were working six days a week, PT twice a day, and usually six to eight hours at either classroom or range, working on the different military skills that they would be tested on here at Sandhost. The reward part is we are not just like an instructor and the trainee. The trainee, we are more than that. We like a family because they are not just teach and go and don't pay attention on us, but they care so much. So the first thing that we did when we came in to begin the Sanders train up with the cadets at the Royal Military Academy in Thailand was assess where they're at, figure out what their strengths and weaknesses are. One thing that we learned right away was that the Thai cadets are extremely fast, but that they needed some work in the weight room. So for the physical development program we focus mostly on rocking with increasing weight rather than increasing speed and working on the three core lifts to help build some strength. It's super fast. There's no time to think. There's no time to wait. Similarly with their military skills, the Thai cadets are excellent marksmen. Their marksmanship program at the Thai Military Academy and the marksmanship program that they receive from the Special Forces Regiment train up that they receive in Locaree is fantastic. That makes them extremely proficient. However, many of the Americanisms or the U.S. Armyisms, if you'd like to call it, that would be tested in a competition weren't things that they had experience with. So we had the opportunity to build the interoperability between the SFAB and the 3rd Special Forces Regiment, the CRMA Cadre and the Thai cadets through showing them the American way, having them show us the Thai way and then figuring out where there's overlap, where there's differences, what things we needed to adjust on either end so they would be able to come here and be tested to the American standard and succeed against the United States Corps cadets, the U.S. ROTC teams that are here and the other countries, militaries, academies who have a long-standing tradition of attending sanders and already know what the American events to expect.