 I couldn't be more proud of the 239th County Communications Squadron. They've really pushed hard to make Bumbua a success. We are the largest presence during this exercise and we've had planners, people driving the buses, the first sergeants taking care of all of the airmen here and it's really been needed to see the 239th involved in every aspect of making the entire exercise for all the six participants who are in the process. COM requires us to go where there isn't COM. So learning to set up the equipment and do the initial install, that equipment is something we simply haven't trained to. So doing this kind of training does really make us more agile and puts us directly with our mission set for where American Indians are next. We had a lot of our airmen who weren't quite to their part yet, volunteering for anything and everything they could get their hands on. It was awesome seeing the initiative that they were taking and once it kept going forward their job proficiency was coming out so these good airmen leadership qualities were able to pick up on all of our people as they're working in that more stressful environment than you would see at a standard drill weekend. It was very good to watch those folks rise and then when you take out key players with some of those injects then you get to see how your team operates without you and I'm very proud of everyone who has stepped up. I feel that Bambu is going fantastic so far. The fact that we are able to identify where our strengths lie, where our weaknesses lie, that we have multiple teams out here, we have some of our more experienced players in the more austere environment and seeing how that contested situation plays out with our subject manner experts and then also baselining some of our newer trainees in on an equipment validation piece and initial training and seeing how we can tailor our training plan for both of those sets of individuals within our squadron we're identifying a lot of areas where we can improve and a lot of best practices so far.