 how is everybody? Good morning, everyone. We hope everybody's go ahead Betsy. No, no, I'm done. Hope everybody's doing well and the thunderstorms and tornadoes and all of that that have been going on across the United States here this week. Greg has rain right now. Do you have great rain? I do have rain right now. It was it was dry when Finn and I went out for a morning walk, but it was definitely overcast. It was so overcast that he let me sleep in an extra half hour. Oh, wow. That's a good thing. So the same storm system is coming through here, but fortunately for us, I hope that we're not going to see any bad stuff this afternoon. We don't get it till two or three. So the the heat of Ontario today, you know, the whole 10 degrees should, or I guess that's 50 degrees Fahrenheit. It won't it won't affect anybody. So we hope everybody's doing well. Had a couple of people talking about the storms in the chat this morning. So I wanted to acknowledge that we did have some bad weather around the world today. And fear fear delici is the very first person in the in the chat this morning. Yeah, they're talking about stuff. Wicked tree as has been in the background doing her stuff. But Anne is here D Spencer card down in Augusta, Georgia. Let's see. Hillary Gatsby is here from beautiful sunny. Maybe I don't know what the report was, but people always give us the weather in the morning. That's right. Murray Maloney is here. Audrey Martin. Yeah. Well, and we gave a weather report. So let's see as as is here. Wicked tree say said Guten tag as your Robinson says Bonjour, very sloppy. Hey, Mary. Oh, yeah, I love Mary. Yes, I do. We need to get together for dinner or lunch or whatever that was. Um, again, Lisa, your vase is here. Hey, Lisa, Lisa got a big deal coming up. She's taken over some of the social media responsibilities. Thank you. Yeah, we appreciate that. Because it helps this show go further in water. April. Dennis is here from Idaho. Watching the sun come up over sawtooth ridge. Yeah. Okay. Without all this can have that view. Northeast Ohio scattered showers here high 73 and feared or leasy. This is not the weather as you show. Let's see. Judith fries here. Biscuits to mags. That was wonderful and plus Jensen is here from interlocking. Yoke is here. Chris Ferrielo has also gotten a little something something orange for you, Chris. Now a team leader with the social media part of the ambassadors project. Congratulations on that. And for all the wonderful work you're going to do as well, Chris Ferrielo. Judy Stutz is here. Susan H. Aussie M. It's raining down in Queensland, Australia. Uh, David Dodd is here. DuPont, Washington. Let's see. Victor is here. Victor Rose. Sandy Paddock is here. Biscuit. Yeah, I said it. Susie Carter. Lisa Gervais. Yes, my dryer is going. Give them that anecdote. Yeah. Erin Saltziak Robertson, Virginia Beach. Robert Cohen. Let's see. More biscuits, Mary Slutby. If we get together, we got to go for breakfast. Maybe we should just meet in the morning, have breakfast, get our computers out, then have lunch, keep our computers out, and have dinner. How about that? Oh, who am I missing here? Erin. I got Erin. Emily L. Aussie M. Got them up. Lynette Jester is here. Denver is here. Gerardus. Hello. And Kristen Anderson. If other people show up, if other people show up, hello, and we're glad you're here. And those who watch afterwards, too. And what? And those who watch afterwards. Oh, yes, yes. But I mean, if you show up, we say your name. That's true. You can't really say their name after the fact. Yes. Insert name here. No, say your name a lot in your head while you're doing it. You guys have anecdotes in your family. Do you have a little stories that are funny? I was thinking about this week. I'm sure my brother's the one to ask, because he just remembers a bunch of stories, and he's a great story to hear. Can you give him a call, please? Yeah, that's great. No, but I'll call in my lifeline, my brother, but I'm not going to call him now. What about you, Betsy Cove? I knew you were going to ask me. I couldn't come up with anything. The few times I did think about it. Sorry. I like Greg. I know there are some. They're in there somewhere. You know what? There's one I can think of, and it's top of mind because I just got a bunch of photos from my cousin. My aunt passed away a couple of weeks ago, and so now there's only one sibling left on that. My mother was the first one to pass away many years ago, but there was a story when my mom and dad were fairly young, and they went smell fishing at night with my uncle and aunt. But it's sort of not exactly legal, and they were chased by, it's not called a warden, the local officer. And so they took off into the ditch and going across country, and then eventually they didn't get captured or anything, but they came back pretty soaked and what not. And that was apparently my mom's first run-in with the law, and so they made a lot of fun about that. Where were they fishing for? Well, smelts or little fish. You can get them at night, and they're very tasty, but apparently when they were doing it, it was not an appropriate season or something for that. It's a Canadian thing? Yeah, okay. We've got lots of little creeks out. We don't call them cricks like you might in Appalachia. Cricks, yeah. Out in our back 40. Yeah. Well, we've got some some anecdotes that we can talk about. Let's see if my present comes up. It's absolutely not coming up. Thank you. I have no idea why that's wasn't working for me. All right, there we go. Question of the week. What's funny? Anecdote in your family? We had about 16 answers. Not a lot of answers, but lots of good stories, and there are some longer stories in here. I'm going to just shoot a couple of short stories, not short stories, but shorter anecdotes. There you go. An anecdote is a story that comes to a point. That's basically what it is. It has a point to it. So the anecdotes that we have, the very first one, 16 answers, 24 upvotes, Alexis Nelson. This is great. My first cousin once removed William William McGurk, and two other inmates constructed a makeshift 14 foot kayak using wood, plastic sheets, duct tape, and vermin. So they made this ship and they escaped from Sam Quinton prison. But what's funny is they made their craft in the lumber shop. Nobody figured out that they were making a kayak, and they put the words Rubba Dub Dub and Marin Yacht Club on it. A little camouflage while they're working in the shop in front of everybody. They snuck it from the prison and into the water and attempted to paddle away as guards looked on. They were just hanging out looking on. The craft was sound, but strong winds caused a giant swell to flood the boat, started to sink before they made it past the edge of the prison property at Sam Quinton. Fortunately for them, they were wearing sweatshirts and hats that had been painted bright orange with a loco of Marin Yacht Club. They were pretty crazy good about that. A guard spotted them clutching to their overturned craft as they kicked the shore. He asked if they needed help. My cousin Willie held up his wrist and shouted, we just lost a couple of oars, but my time axe is still running. So the point of this anecdote is that his watch is still running. Nothing to do with escaping from prison or the prison not noticing they were doing that. And so I pulled up his profile. It's a good one. He's Mick Girk 30. Apparently I have cousins who were in prison. There you go. It's a nice profile. That ties in nicely to my story. Look, there's kayakers in front of Sam Quinton. I just want to note that in this picture. Yeah. Oh, and William Henry McGurk. There's lots of stuff. That does look like you ever seen the commercials for the tape where they say they can build a tape, a boat completely out of tape and the boat runs. That's what that boat looks like. Yes, it does. There's the little flag they made. Pretty cool. Oh, did they film a time axe commercial afterwards? No, I don't think so. I don't think they would have let them do that. But there's lots of old stuff. The old man in the gun. So that's the case. It's the movie that Casey Affleck, Sissy Spakes and Robert Redford. And there's lots of really fun stuff on here. And so it went again for the second time a jury has decided not to convict two or three Sam Quinton prisoners who sailed to freedom in an improvised canoe decorated with the words Rubba Dub Dub, Marin Yacht Club. Okay, so that's a fun one. All right. That is neat. That is a fun one. Check that one out if you want to. The second one I picked out was this is one of my all time favorites. If you've ever wondered why you could not find some ancestors on a census, this might explain it. The certification by Harry, H-E-R-Y, Swearington, the Marshall and census taker indicates his frustration. I certify to be 64 pages and a piece of page inhabitants. I'd done as near in accordance with my oath as I could. The people was hard to get along with signed H- Swearington. Yeah, they didn't want to get their census taken. So the anecdote of that story is it's hard to take a census. Okay. Number three is from Brian Questnell. Continuing with a census theme, discovering a close relative was a guest of the state prisoner. In 1910 was a bit surprising. Fortunately, his occupation was listed as machinist as opposed to his previous role as burglar. All right. It was comforting to know that he was at least able to retain gainful employment while on involuntary sabbatical. I love the way Brian wrote that. That's great. Involuntary sabbatical. Remember that. That's a nice turn of phrase. I got to write that down. Involuntary sabbatical. Let's see. Yeah, like my kid, one time didn't want to go to the park. Yeah. I made him get in the van. I was driving a Jeep at the time. I made him get in the Jeep and I said, well, you have to go because I can't leave you in the house alone. It's against the law to leave a child alone in the house before they turn 13 in Canada. Period. He had to go to the park and he had an involuntary, he had a voluntary sabbatical in the Jeep while his brother and I played in the pool. Chris Federiello says I once found a note 1950 census in Newbury port that a few pages were taken by seagulls. Back then seagulls were jerks. Yes, they were. That's hilarious. All right. On to the last one. My great grandparents had a little difficulty obtaining a marriage license and this one's from Randall Marriott. By the way, they did get a license and were married in Christmas of 1890, but here it is. Let's see. Did I get the right one? Wait. Oh, I had it all pulled up. There it is. I found it. Jefferson Boone Thomas yesterday morning applied to the county clerk king for a marriage license with Ms. Perley Bell Tucker. If you're going to get married, married somebody named Perley. As both parties were under age, the applicant produced letters from the mother and the father of the young lady and his own father consenting to the issuance of the license. But as the handwriting in all cases was about the same, Mr. King thought best to have the applicant make an oath to the signatures. But he drew the license line there, but he drew the line there, refused to make the oath, and has not yet got a license. Was it real? Yeah. The kid, they were afraid the kid was fraudulently getting permission to have this wedding a bit later. What was the year on this? 1890. And in the information, it says they got married Christmas day. So they were trying to get married on the 20, this showed up in the 23rd 1890, which back then items wouldn't show up for a week or so. So maybe they try to get married like the 15th or the yeah. So but they did get married Christmas date. So congratulations. And the point of this is don't try and forge your parent signatures on anything. You know, your parents have to sign that report card. I once had a student do that in front of me. I was asking for a permission slip or a field trip. And I looked at it and I said, we don't have a signature. And they're like, Oh, here. Yeah, not the brightest bulb in the. We're so glad you're molding their minds. Crying. Oh, I went ahead and called. I had parents on my phone. So, you know, yeah, I bet you have my parents on your phone. Well, you know, you knew you were in trouble. There was a period when things bad enough in a band rehearsal and somebody was really acting up. I was like, okay. Hello, Mrs Smith. Hi. Yes. Well, that was a question of the week. If you want to read the rest of them, please feel free to there are a couple of novella in there. Pretty good. So anecdotes. Great. So if we move on to the question of the week about the profiles, the profile question is which national parks champion are you most closely connected to building on the theme? Because of course, Earth Day was this week on the 22nd. And so what better way to celebrate Earth Day than to go to a national park and enjoy nature and its grandeur. And so the two people who are part of the wiki tree combat, the question is, which one of you more closely connected to Teddy Roosevelt, who promoted national parks, national park system, our South African president, Paul Kruger, who is the whose name is based on the Kruger National Park in South Africa. So since all of these profiles are all land based and park based and what not, I thought what better way to celebrate that than with a map. So I created a little map. And you can I'm just going to put the URL right here on the screen. But you can also we're going to put it in the chat. And let's see. Can someone grab that in the chat? I think Azure was going to drop. It's also linked. I think Lazar said she Azure. Azure pinned it to the top of the chat. So it should be right there. So easy to get it. Got it. Okay. So one of the things you cool things you can do in Google Maps, if you're logged in with a Google account, you can actually go and you can make up your own custom maps. And I've done one of a couple of these before. But so I did one for this. And I put little markers for each of the maps, each of the locations for all of the profiles that we're going to talk about today. And you can also color code you if you go to and you click on any legend, you can actually click on the paint can and then color code them. And so I've color coded the two primary ones that Theodore Roosevelt National Park or the and the Kruger National Park. And so our interactive part of this piece will be to ask you to write down which of those parks are you closest to physically closest to. So I suspect again, it's going to be a little lopsided. But I'm hoping there's some people who are closer to I can tell you upstate upstate New York or Pennsylvania. Where is the one over there closest to me? No, of the two red ones of the two primary ones. Oh, oh, yeah, yeah, I am going to ask the next question, of course, which is which of the of all the parks are you so are you closer to Theodore Roosevelt National Park or Kruger National Park is question number one. And then question number two, the follow up one of all of the parks, which one are you close, but we'll answer that one later. I have a comment to make, you know, we have Leanne Kruger on our person. Yes, yes, that might be related to her husband's family, the Kruger National Park. Just saying they have lots of people down on South Africa. Nice. Yep. Nice. Very cool. Yeah. So if you click on any one of those ones, one of the things you can do is you can get directions or view and and then you could actually get an actual distance. And you'll notice I added the link to the profiles for each in each of those. Greg. Yeah, you never cease to a base. You can click on this link and then go straight to Theodore Roosevelt profile. I believe the wiki tree person answering Teddy would be as yes. Oh, is as answering question first? I think so. Oh, that's good. She can participate. Of course. Of course she is. So let me go through. There's there's lots of profiles. It seems every week they add two or four more profiles to the ones to go through. But anyways, Teddy Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. Apparently, just in cousin of mine, born 27th of October, 1858 in New York County, New York. There's a New York County in New York, New York State. That's a historic county, I believe. Oh, okay. Yeah. Is New York City in New York County in New York State? But not but not anymore, right? Because oh, okay. Now, New York City, we have Brooklyn, which is in King County and men. I think there's a man. No, I'm not sure, but but it's a historical thing for sure. Okay. So the trivia that we know is just amazing. What's that? The trivia that we know is just amazing. So you mean New York City currently is so big one county can't even contain it? Is that true? Yes. Yes. I'm sorry, I got distracted by something. And I didn't hear you because the dryer was buzzing. Okay. Well, there we go. Oh, I didn't realize that Teddy's mother was Martha Stewart. Yeah. Yeah. Well, that's a coincidence. Isn't that wild? There's a time loop for you. But not that Martha Stewart. Martha Stewart Bullock. Isn't that that just jumped out at me right there? I didn't prepare that remark. That was just off the cuff, as many are. Anyways, we have a nice succession table here because of course, Peter Roosevelt had many prominent positions, but he was a governor of New York, a 33rd governor of New York. And then the 25th and the 26th president of the United States. And then he was so... Anyways, the biography is huge. One of the things I like about a number of these profiles this week is the inclusion of the pictures throughout. So there's lots of needs here. So here's a teddy bear, of course. His biography starts with a quote, it's a fairly long quote, but basically it's that he credits the man. Basically, he's all about the person, people who do the work or do, you know, are in the conflict and not those who just write about or not critics. Why not? So it's the doer that deserves the glory and not those who just observe from afar. His parents, again, Theodore Thee, Roosevelt, he didn't like the name Teddy, apparently itself, but they called her Tee-Dee was his nickname inside his family. And he had his closest sister, he called her Bamey, even though her name was Anna. So one little piece of trivia there. He had... His first wife was Alice. But very sadly, both his... After their first child was born, was also named Alice, his mother and his wife both died on the same day, just two days after the birth of that first child. Isn't that sad? Awful. Yeah. Much. That is just too much, just too much. But he did marry again and then had five other children with his second wife. Considered a true American hero, an example that people should live by. So the profile, of course, goes on about his presidency. And so I was a little confused here. He says he became vice president of the United States. And on the 14th, when President McKinley was assassinated, he began... Okay, so he did become president after the assassination. So I wasn't sure if the... When I first read this, I was confused whether he became vice president. He moved up, but I think he moved into the top spot. Am I reading that right? Into the top spot of what? Of being coming president after McKinley was assassinated. Oh, yes. If he was vice president, then he would be next in line. Is that what you're saying? Oh, okay. Now I'm... When I first read it, there was too many clauses and I was confused, but you're right. So he was vice president when McKinley was president. Yes. And then... And so when he was assassinated, he became the president. There we go. Exactly. Got it. Okay. First, the world leader to go to the court of arbitration at The Hague. That's pretty cool. And then I love this little editorial cartoon. He was a good character to put in editorial cartoons. Yeah. Yeah. And see, look at this nice feature of Okichi Plus. You can zoom in on the thing, of course. You don't want to have it centered, right? You lose their head. There we go. And then, okay, anyways, he was... But he was... Why he's included in this, of course, is because it was promotion of the National Park System. And then the other person who is also the primary profile is Stephanus Johannes Paulus Kruger from South Africa, born in Bochuk, Steinsburg District Cup Colony, and then passed away, and that's in 1825, passed away the 14th of July 1904 in Clarence, Switzerland. And he was the third state president of the South African Republic way back, 1881 to 1900. So he was... He would have been president during the Boer War, I'm guessing. He has a nice family photo there, and a statue of him in the church square. And again, this profile is really nicely done with the photos interspersed throughout. Lots of them there. And really cool how some of it is written right in the... I don't know if that's Dutch or actually Afrikaans. Could be either. So someone might correct me on that. But neat that they have the native language there in which it was written. And that's it. There's not a huge flow of the biography there. It's very short, but it does refer to a fuller biography on Wikipedia. But he has a national park named after him, which is in South Africa, as you can see right there. And moving on, George Catlin. He is one of the few that doesn't have a national park named after him or directly associated with him. So on the map, I linked his birthplace, which is Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania. Oh, sure. I know Wilkes Barre. Close that up. So one of the things, the cool things, if you're on the map and you've got the legend here, when you hover over a place in the legend, you can see it highlights. So if I'm highlighting you, so can you see how Wilkes Barre is highlighted there? It's not popping up. Well, I'm seeing, yes, Wilkes Barre is circled in white. Yes, yes. That's what I mean. Okay. Yeah. So if I go back to Petty Roosevelt Park, you can see it's right. Yes. That white halo around it that sort of is highlighted. That's nice. It pops. Yeah. Yeah. And now if I were to click on it or double click on here, it would zoom right into that. But then of course, at least lose the global view and have to zoom back out and give you all motion sickness. So I won't do that. I will just go over here, highlight it on the eastern seaborn of the North America there. So, but he was, he promoted parks and he actually did a lot of, a lot of sort of roughing it and investigation. He's most famous for being a painter, author, and traveler, specializing in portraits of Native Americans in the Old West. And there's a number of those portraits that are included in the bio very nicely done. Amazing work. He worked with, he ventured through and work with a number of different tribes, 18 different tribes, including the Pawnee, Omaha and Ponca in the south, Mandan, Hidasta, Hidatsa, Cheyenne, Pro, Asinaboyne and Blackfeet to the north. During later trips along the Arkansas, Red and Mississippi rivers, visits to the Florida and the Great Lakes, he went all over the place, produced more than 500 paintings. But sadly, at one point, he was forced to sell, looks like 607, all of his paintings, which were 607 at that point, due to personal debts. Isn't that sad? Anyways, amazing, amazing work, amazing artist. And then passed away in New York, New York City, 1772. I love that the profile has so many examples of his work together. Yeah, yeah, and very detailed. Yeah. So there's some neat, look, there's some DNA connections. There's a wide DNA connection to him. One of our wiki chairs has done a wide DNA test and is connected. And someone is close enough to have some autosomal DNA. So that's kind of nice. And I would think here, there was a link to a free space page of his works. There it is. Yeah, some of that can be found on the wiki tree. So if we click on that, we've got a free space page of more paintings and stuff and links to another. So more things to investigate. Marjory Stonem, the Grand Dame of the Everglades. So again, Everglades in Florida here. So that's the, that little marker is not in Cuba. We could zoom in a little bit to see. It's just in the southern tip of Florida. That's where Everglades National Park is. Is it on the coast? Everglades National Park. All of that green is the park. Yeah. It's huge. Yeah. So like, like in a lot of places, like Google has to put a pin somewhere. So like in your town, it's usually where the city hall is. If you just, right. So this might be where the park office is. I'm guessing. And if you say, is it waterfront? Well, it's pretty swampy the whole thing. Yeah. All of alligators. Don't get out of your car on the side of the road if you get stuck. Right. That's right. Well, it's most fun. We did, we actually did a trip when we took our kids on a trip to Florida at one point. And we did the hoverboat thing through, which is kind of neat. Is it hovercraft? Hover one with a big fan on the back. Yeah. That's right. Yeah. And that's not, I don't know what they call those, but those are air, air boats, I think. Somebody can correct me on that. Hovercraft actually hovers above. And those are just really flat boats that just skim. Yeah. Skim over the tops of those alligators. Right. Yeah. So Marjorie is the grand dam. She was an American journalist, writer, feminist and environmentalist. And her, her quote is, be a nuisance where it counts. I like that. I know. Like basically, be the grit in the machine when you need to, you know, exact some change, you know. So apparently. Pick your battles. Yeah. Back in 1917, she with three other women made the trip to this Florida State Capitol and spoke about women's suffragette. But it was a big room. Men sitting around with spittoons between every two or three of them. They ignored them. All they did was spit in the spittoons. Didn't pay attention to us at all. Very sad to hear. But she fought that battle. So according to this, on the 14th Amendment, the Constitution was passed in 1920, allowing women to vote. But Florida did not ratify that until 1969. So does that mean that women couldn't vote in Florida? Or they just had, they just didn't acknowledge the fact that women were voting in Florida until 1969? I think it has to be the first one. I can't believe that. No, because the U.S. Constitution would supersede. Okay. Rights, I would think. Women couldn't have bank accounts until the 70s in their own names. What? Yeah. That is. That's crazy. That doesn't, that doesn't sound like it could be true. That just seems so ridiculous. But the husband had to be a co-signer. Wow. That's wild. Or father. Anyways, she wrote a book, The Everglades River of Grass, and that has been continually in print. And anyway, she's been a huge component or proponent for the park. And won some awards because of her work. It's a great work, Marjorie. Okay. Next we have Suekou Kunitomi, or Sue, born the 6th of January, 1923 in Little Tokyo in Los Angeles, and passed away at the age of 83 in May of 2006. She was a Japanese internee in the World War II, teacher, activist, and longtime chair of the Manzanar Committee, which established the annual Manzanar Pebble Grimage and obtained national historic site status for the former concentration camp. So, yes. Now, this is a, this piece of history, Canada also interned Japanese Canadians, Japanese nationals during World War II. And it's a very, it's not something that's often taught in history classes. And I, and I, and the same sort of thing did happen to our neighbors to the South in the States as well. And many of the, many of those people, at least in Canada, and I suspect in the States, were, really did not have ties to Japan and the war, but just because of their heritage. So that was, that is something that has, I think there has been an official apology in Canada. I don't know if something has come out in the States, the official apology or not. But anyway, she obviously was an activist and made people aware of that. And now there's a national historic site to that. And that is located, let me zoom out again. Look for the halo. And there it is, California. Little, little north of LA. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Then we have George Bird, George Bird Grinnell, born in 1849 in Brooklyn, died in 1938, the age of 88 in Manhattan. And he was an anthropologist, historian, naturalist, and writer. And he founded the National Audubon Society. Oh, yeah. Named after, of course, famous naturalists. I think it's John Audubon, isn't it? Yes. So yeah, he founded the National Audubon Society. And he is connected to the Glacier National Park. So his, at one point, I opened up his Wikipedia article. And he was a proponent and traveled to Glacier National Park, which is, there it is, Montana, it looks like. And then we go over to Holland for Anthony George, or Georg Krüller, born the 1st of May, 1862 in Rotterdam, passed away the 5th of December, 1941 in Ada, Gelderland, Netherlands. He was a Dutch businessman known as the founder of the state of De Hugga, De Hugga, Belova, and played a significant role in the establishment of the Netherlands School of Economics, and after whom the Krüller-Muller Museum is named. And the De Hugga Belova National Park is located in the province of Gelderland, where he lived 5,400 acre hectares of that. And again, you can see that on the map, if I zoom out enough. Actually, let's zoom into it, so you can see it right there, the heart. And Yoke visited this park as a question. I was just wondering the same thing. Tell us, Yoke, what's the park like? Have you been there before? Moving on, we have Stephen Ting Mather, a distant cousin, born in 1867 in San Francisco. If it was 76, it would be on the Centenary, but it's not quite the Centenary, right? The 4th of July, 1867. Three days after Canada became a country, so that's kind of cool, which would have been July 1st, 1867, and passed away the 22nd of January 1930. And he was another conservationist, but also an industrialist, and president of a Perkelson and Mather Borax Company. He became a millionaire. He moved to New York, but he did lots of work in the Shenandoah, and the Great Smoky Mountains National Parks, and his math pinpoint is a wilderness area that was named after him, which is showing where we're here. There it is, Washington, interesting. And then we have Karamoana Elizabeth McKean, born in Vernon, or the 23rd of June in New Zealand, and then passed away on the 10th of June 2006, and Cobbton, Victoria, Australia, at the grand age of 101. Love to see that. Isn't that neat? 101. She became the first female national park ranger in Victoria, Australia. Isn't that cool? First female park ranger. Collector, conservationist, preservationist, naturalist, and two species of fungus have been named after her. Oh, if I had a fungus named after me, it would be perfect. I'm not sure if you had to pick something to be named after you. I'm not sure fungus would be top of my list, but you take what you can get. And so if we zoom out to Australia, we can see where Victoria, of course, is the state just above Tasmania, the south east. There we go. Then we're moving on to John Muir. Hey, great. Great. Can I ask you a question? Just going back to Stephen Ting, Mather, was there, there is a high school in Chicago that is named after him. So do you have any Chicago connections? I didn't hear you. Well, it's mentioned here in his, his, his Wiki, that there was a, that that was a place. Where is this Chicago? Let's see. He was born in San Francisco, died in Massachusetts. He may have, he might have driven through. Let's see what he would have seen if his ancestors had- But he didn't find any alligators on the drive. I hope not. No, it doesn't look like there. Because I double checked, you know, it could be a different, it was, it said Stephen T. Mather, and then I dug a little deeper and sure enough, it was Ting, T-Y-N-G. So it is, it is named after him. Yeah. Well, let's do a search for Chicago. Control-F Chicago. In 1840, he, he moved with his wife to Chicago and that's where they established a distribution, distribution center for his company. There you go. Okay. Mystery solved. So his business started in Chicago, it looks like. He was active in many silver groups, including the Chicago City Club and the Municipal Builders Club. So he was a upstanding Chicago citizen. Good question. Then John Muir from Scotland. We've got, we've got Murray Maloney, he was giving us the entire story. Oh, I'm posting it there. There's a second version, there's a continued part. He came to Canada to join his younger brother to escape the draft for the American Civil War. Wow. I don't know if that's in his profile, but thank you Murray. Thank you. I don't think it was. Fascinating. But it should be. This is John Muir. Okay. Tell him the story, John. There, Murray. There we go. Murray, Muir, John, yeah. Yeah, there we go. There we go. So that's the story of his life. Thank you and the Canadian connection. How he fits in here, of course, is his work as an environmentalist, local lover of the Alpine Club and the Sierra Club. On the map, there is a national monument devoted to him, which is in California. Muir Woods National Monument. Is there a monument in the monument, or is it just the park? Oh, well, let's see what we can do. We do it in the maps. Can you do, grab the little man and make him stand in front of it? Where's my little man? Come on, little man. Is there not a road, though? It won't do it, because the car can't grab the little woods. Oh, right, yeah. There's a picture right there. There we go. It's gorgeous. It's a national monument. Look at that. That's pretty good. Muir Beach, according to Lynette, was the newest beach in San Francisco. Oh, really? Yeah, Lynette, how do you know? That's pretty. That's pretty. Look away. Google's taking our picture. Look away. Yeah, I don't think the Google car was allowed on that path. No. Wow. This is very nice. Yeah. Oh, there's a little man there. Cool. Some clover. Yeah. Queen Victoria even makes the list of profiles this week. Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India, and so on and so forth. Again, of course, a nice profile. I'm pretty sure we've talked about this family a few times. Possibly. I will not belabor the point. Again, it's still a lovely profile. Her claim to fame in this, of course, is Victoria Falls in Africa, was named after her, among a whole pile of other things around the world, including including the capital city of British Columbia, Victoria, BC. But anyways, here is Victoria Falls in Africa, which is actually in Zimbabwe, I believe. Is that right? Yes, it is Zimbabwe. And then the final, the final profile of the week is Brigadier General Charles Denton Young, born on the March 1864 in Maslick, Mason, Kentucky, and passed away the 8th of January, 1922 at 57 in Lagos, Nigeria. He was only the third African American graduate to graduate from the United States military academy at West Point. And he was the very first black man to achieve the rank of colonel in the United States Army. He held many commands and was the highest ranking black officer in the United States until his death. And then 100 years after he died, he was posthumously promoted to Brigadier General for his accomplishments. Yeah. His beginning was difficult. He was born during the Civil War. And his parents were enslaved to enslaved parents, Gabriel Young and Armintia Bruin. His father was able to escape and join the Union Army during that Civil War. Then afterwards his family moved to Ohio, where he attended school. And then he was appointed to West Point, graduated, third black man to do so, and then went on. He returned to active duty during the Spanish American War and was command of the 10th Calgary that charged up San Juan Hill. So that's a fairly famous battle, isn't it? The Battle of San Juan Hill. He was appointed the superintendent of two national parks in California, Sequoia and General Grant's National Parks. So hence his inclusion here. And then he married eight males, two children. He was assigned the Poncho Villa Expedition in New Mexico. And then he was appointed to the United States military attache to Liberia, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic. And then passed away in Nigeria and buried in the Arlington National Cemetery. So quite an impressive man and very nice profile form there. And his map actually, his home, let's zoom in back to that over here. His home was dedicated as a national historic site by President Obama. I think it's, where was it here? Yeah, President Obama designated his house a national monument, the Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers National Monument to commemorate his life and the lies and service of the Buffalo Soldiers. That's, that's what I'm the park, the location that I'm closest to. That's the one you're closest to. Cool. So have people been telling us where they're closest to? Yes. Yeah, you can go back and reread the chat later on. I'll read it for myself. Okay. All right. Well, thanks, Greg. Fun as always. And next week, we're talking about poets from Parks to Poets. Parks to Poets. Yeah. Yeah. Very cool. So, well, let's see. Let's, let's switch over, switch gears to photos. I, what I'm going to do is I'm going to let you see, see the full, no, let's see. There you should be able to see now the full photo. Yeah. So this was contributed by Emily Ledford. And these are her paternal grandparents, Nina and Robert Cole. They were married for 58 years with 12 children, 12, 12 and lived their whole lives in Lafellets, Tennessee. I hope I'm saying that's correct correctly. They passed away hand in hand on December 6, 2010. To get like they both passed away at the same time. That's what it says. That's crazy. I know. I know. That just touched me when I read that this morning. So, beautiful, beautiful photo. Thank you, Emily. And then our next photo, this lovely couple is Edison Williams contributed this and says that this is William Wallace McKinley Jr. and his wife, Leela Ruth Peeler McKinley, around 1969. They were married around 1932. And William McKinley died June 1978. And Leela was interred next to him in Purcell, Purcell, Texas when she passed in 2007. So not, not exactly sure of the relationship between Edison and this couple, but it's a very, very sweet girl. I know. Oh, lovely, lovely. And then our third photo is, oh, do we, oh yes, that's right. Thanks, thanks. You'll be the big finish. Okay, our next photo is a historic one. Oh, and it doesn't look like I can click on it. It was just inserted into the there. How's that? Can we Yeah, that's good. So John Thompson contributed this. He said climbing the tree in search of a couple's photo. I find the portrait of Sarah, who is Monk, M-O-N-C-K 168 Mason, and her husband, Robert Mason. This is his sixth great-grandparents whom he shares with many others, many other sixth great-grandchildren of this lovely couple. So, and people in the comments were wondering, I wonder how long they had to sit still. Really? And his arm must have been tired holding it up like that. I know, I know. And what is he doing? Oh, he's got his, his hand on the back of her chair. But it's, Oh, there's a chair there. Yeah. So, and our final couple. And I will turn, I will stop sharing over to you, Megs. That is my mom and dad. And I'll tell you where we are. And you'll say we're all the people. This was in Niagara Falls, Canada, which is usually covered up with people, but it was before the end of COVID. And it was the first time I had seen them in two years. So, I drove up. And that is early, early bird gallden. So, Earl gallden and jump gallden. I just snapped that picture. I thought it was just adorable. Oh, that's sweet. All right. And they're, they're living. So this should really be unlisted, but we're not. Well, you're not showing their faces. So I don't know. And they're not in witness protection programs. Thank you, Betty. You're looking for an older man with gray hair. And a lady in a red coat. Yeah. We all did the zip line at, at, at Niagara. My mom, her friend, Jan, and I, and we were all wearing, I was had on, I had on my wiki tree coat, big red, orange coat. So we all had on orange or red. And so on the zip line, it was kind of cool looking. Neat. Yes. My mom did the zip line. She did. That is amazing. Good for her. I've not, I've not done a zip line. I'm, I'm not really great with heights. So the zip line at, at, at Niagara is pretty cool. It doesn't actually go over the falls. Okay. It goes along the side of the canyon. Okay. The ravine. So it goes along the side of it. So you have a gorgeous view though, unfettered view of the falls. Okay. When we were there, somebody had jumped into the river and was floating down the river underneath us. And I was like, should we tell somebody about this? Yeah. He goes down too far. He's going to get drowned in. Well, because you know that I have family in Niagara Falls, like from my past. Canada or the U.S. in Canada. And my grandfather was born there and his mother was born there. And so, you know, I see a research trip in my future. I've, I've been, but, but it was before I was a genealogist. So maybe this is my third time, I think, was that trip? Yeah. Fun. Yeah. All right. So in lieu of a tip, we are going to return to last week's discussion of invitations to living people on what to do with living relative that you relatives you may have created maybe five years ago, what, what to do. And so I have, I have a series of questions that were relayed to me and we're going to answer them. And then if there are more that come through the, the chat, then we'll answer those two. And I believe Azure was going to post a series of health pages. So the health page on invitations, living people, anonymous placeholders, which is the new thing for a living person who declines to become a wikitri family member and deletion of profiles. So let's look at these questions and we'll see if we can make it clear. And I'll be hopping around to, to various pages depending on what we need to reference. So first question is what if you have an elderly relative who say is visually impaired, does not use the computer, but said that I can add her. So in reading all of the health pages, thank you, Azure. Thank you very much. In reading the health pages, what it allows for is for you to add only add a living person who is your legal dependent. So to me that implies children. I suppose it's possible if you, you had power of attorney for an elderly relative that they might be your legal dependent. But in this case, I would say, unfortunately, you would even though she says that you can add her, you're going to have to do an anonymous placeholder for her. Would you agree in that interpretation? Greg's, Greg mags. Yeah. It looks like that. Yeah. Yeah. So there's that question. What about my elderly relative that is still living whom I added on wiki tree five years ago. So if you go to that profile, assuming you're the, I assume you're the profile manager, you will see a banner up at the top with an exclamation point. And it's, it will say, please invite this person to wiki tree. And so then you would go into edit mode. And in the opening, you know, information for name and dates and locations. There's an email field. And you would put, you would put the person's email address in there, and then they will get an invitation. And we did go, we did talk about this last week, on the page, the help page for in the invitations, you will see a sample of what they will receive. So if, if the person responds by, by creating password, a wiki tree account within 30 days, great. You'll proceed in merrily along. If they do nothing within 30 days or decline the invitation, then the profile will convert to an anonymous placeholder profile, which basically just either says anonymous Smith, or maybe an initial like M Smith. And, and it will have a relationship to, to, to, so we know who, so a person knowledgeable about the family will know who they are. But otherwise there will be no information. I just converted an elderly relative of mine from an active profile. I just don't want to bother her. She does have email, but I don't want to trouble her with this. And so I've made her into an anonymous profile placeholder. It's easy. You just there are instructions on the anonymous placeholder help page. And basically you just remove all the dates and the locations. I changed it to a first letter. The relationships are preserved. And then public view. It just says living Smith. And, and the file manager. Got a question. I got two questions. First one is our older profiles, will they not automatically convert to anonymous? And that's, it's a statement from ICM. I just want to verify it's correct. She says older existing profiles will not automatically convert to anonymous. And my dad's 93, but he signed up wiki tree probably 10 years ago. And he's, he's probably not as active, but I think that he probably does scan because he likes to keep up with what I'm doing. Right. Yeah. So he does log in occasionally. I don't think that, that I think you're in your dad's case because he signed up for an account. And my mom, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, they're both fine. It's, it's people who, who do not, who do not accept the invitation. They decline it or they don't respond. Yeah. Older existing profiles. I am not clear in reading through everything. I'm not clear if there's going to be like a sweep of the system. If they're going to clean, if they're going to clean up the, yeah, they're gonna, you know, I, I mean, I guess there would be a way to do it. And like I said, my older relatives profile had a, had a template at the top. So, you know, clearly they could pull out all the living profiles who are not members, right. It could be done. I don't know who manages the decline imitation profile. That's from Sandy. Yes. So that, that is the, the third possibility is, Oh, I see. No, declined. Manage. Oh, in that case, if the, if the invitation is declined, then it becomes an anonymous placeholder and you are still the profile manager. Does that, I hope that answers the question. Yeah. And we do have an answer. Aussie said that the GDG posts said existing profiles will not automatically convert invited or not. Okay. Okay. Okay. Thank you, Aussie. And then the other possibility is that the person could delete the invitation, but that is maybe not the best course of action because then maybe somebody else in the family could, could come along, you know, nine months later and say, Oh, hey, look, so-and-so doesn't have a father and then we add you, we invite you. So if you really just wanted one and done, don't be bothered again, just decline the invitation or let it go for 30 days. Right. Don't delete it. Okay. Okay. What if I created a profile for my living cousin and they decided to join WikiTree a year from now? Will that be a duplicate or a problem because of me? And I think in that case, you would just have to do a merge. And that's fine. It's not a problem. Merges happen all the time. How does this affect my CC7 if a profile becomes an anonymous placeholder? It doesn't. They'll still count. So not to worry about that. If you're at 1,000, if you're at 2,000 and you're worried about slipping to 1,999, fear not. Did I take away the badge? No. Do I really have to delete all the living relatives that I've already created years ago? No. Just invite them. Which, depending on the size of your living person that might take a little bit of effort. Yes, please do invite them. Make that gesture giving them the right to accept or decline. Where can I find this new policy? So I think the G2G post already in the chat. Yes, and it's also outlined on the help. Thank you, Azure. On that G2G post as well as the help pages is where you can review the official words. And finally, what age can I add a living profile that I have permission to do so? For example, my kid, 18 years old. Well, so I'm going to switch over to, there is a help page for help children on wiki tree. So again, referencing the statement that you can add a person, if they're your legal with their permission, that would apply to children. So if they're 18, they can be active on wiki tree themselves. If they're 18, then they really fall into the category of someone who should be invited. That's amazing that you have Kismet with April Dennis because she asked that question right before you started to answer it. So I threw her question up so we could see your question. Uh-huh. Leave them. My living kit. Whoops. I'll put it back up. Okay. Thank you. So April, I would say invite them and then they'll either they can either accept and become co-managers of the profile with you, or they can be just remain as anonymous placeholders. Got a couple more questions. When did just come into effect? April 1st. So just about a month ago. April, here is a, Azure is working in the background here. Here's a children on wiki tree note for you to check out on the help pages. Yep. The other question, I'm going to leave that up while I read this to you. How much email do living relatives that are just family members not active get from wiki tree? I don't know if they get any. My parents talk about getting emails and stuff, but Right. Right. I mean, technically. Right. Exactly. I would say if your relative is being disturbed by that, just have them go to their help them go to this part of the profile where they can manage preferences in the genealogist section of the profile, you can control as well as settings. You can control what, how much communication you get. There's the genealogist section and then settings is under my wiki tree. Oh, there's another one. This is an unconnected question. Yes. Ready to go there. How do you correct the relationship from uncle to brother? I keep trying and it goes right back. Okay. Denver, I wonder if you can come to the new member of Q&A by zoom tomorrow morning. Jump on that. Give us the link real quick. Oh, yeah. I don't have that link ready. And Fandy is giving us some love there. Denver, I'm sure that it's, it's probably something very easy to fix, but it's a little hard to diagnose just, you know, without seeing it. Lisa Gervais is offering an anecdote, not an anecdote, an antidote. Denver, try removing both parents from one person then add the correct parents. You're welcome. Not from me, but from Lisa. So if you have any more questions, the best place to throw those out there is to answer the G2G post where the changes were, thank you, Azure, when it was initially announced on April 1st. And is this going to be a topic at the tree tours this week? Yes, which is on Monday, Tuesday. Tuesday at 11, I think. Tuesday at 11. There will be further conversation and deeper dive with Azure. And I think, Greg, are you going to be there? I don't think, I think I have Sophia. Oh, yeah, you're traveling. Okay. No, we have Sophia. Where are you traveling? I'm traveling the next morning. Sophia, are you? What's that? Go ahead. No, I have Sophia on Tuesday, and then I'll be traveling on Wednesday to go to a math conference, folks. So I'll be all mapped up for the next Saturday. Oh, we can't get enough math. Too much mapping. And to wrap things up, I do have one ancestor to celebrate. Let me start sharing that person's, where is he? Okay. Celebrate your answer. Here's the wiki tree tours post. Thank you very much. So this ancestor is Dennis L. Ray. And I saw Judith Frye in the chat a little at the beginning. And then she said, gotta go. My mom wants to go to a yard sale. So Judith, I hope you're able to see this on the replay. So this is her dad's cousin. And his connection to April. Wait a minute. His connection to April. Oh, is that he was married? Okay. Yep. On April 9 1960. And Dennis was the son of his great and Axie Frye Ray. I didn't realize that the fries have very strong genes until I met Dennis. The first time I saw Dennis, I nearly cried. He looked exactly like my grandpa Frye whom I miss a lot. Not only did Dennis look like grandpa Frye, he walked like him, sounded like him, and then had the same mischievous grin. It was like having a small piece of my grandpa again. Boy, could I tell you stories about Dennis Ray. Not all of them good, but funny. Mom and dad told me about the time they visited Dennis in Chicago. He said, watch this and stepped in front of a car. Mom said he did this to collect from the driver's insurance. Later, he became a preacher on the radio. He had many jobs over the years. He was in the US Army for a while and retired from the railroad. The last time we visited him, my mom asked Dennis's wife what he was currently working as and his wife answered, I don't know. I don't ask. Dennis said he was working at a transmission shop. I like his wife's answer better. So I don't think no. He's an Appalachian. Biscuits. Biscuits. And I don't think we have any pictures. So thank you so much, Judith, for sharing Dennis with him. I love the fact that he was such a strong resemblance to your grandfather. My cousin, my second cousin, has a grandson who is the spinning image of my grandfather. And every time I look at him, I'm like, you know, I want to hug him, but I didn't know my grandfather when he was a teenager. And I just got pictures of him. So yeah, that's cool. You know what's a really cool thing about spinning images? If you put them together in a line of photos. You don't say, Greg. So in case you didn't know, there was actually a new app on the scene. Oh! Yes, way. And I showed this off and I forgot that I didn't show it off here at the roundup. But at one of our check-ins during the Connectathon, we talked about the photo lines app. And so it's one that I've added. If you go to your, open up your profile and go to find apps, it's listed on this page here. And shortly, it will also be listed on the fly out from the wiki tree browser. Oh, there it is. It's right there. It is there. I just needed to update. It's also there in the fly out from the wiki tree browser extension. So you put in your app, you log in, you put in your ID, and then what it'll do is it loads your profiles and then you can customize. So here there's a little preview of what your profile looks like. And this is my Douglas line, my eternal line. So I'm going to put the word Douglas in there. So I see it changes that. You can add things like showing the lifespan or if you're living, then it'll just put your birth date there. You could include full names if you wanted. And one feature I added for Megs this week is I added the option so you can change your photo if you wanted a different photo. So my grandfather, when I click on his photo, you see there's actually, there's three possibilities. If I just wanted a silhouette, and this doesn't make sense for my grandfather, because there's an actual photo of him. But there is a his wedding photos. So if we had, if I had a wedding photo for each of my ancestors, then we could make a photo lines of our wedding. So that would be kind of cool. Yes, yes. Wouldn't that be neat? I love that option. Thanks, Greg. The reason I added the silhouette was because you know how sometimes on WikiTree profiles, if you've added a source like a marriage certificate or something like that, but you don't have an actual photo, that marriage certificate becomes their profile picture sort of by default. And in a photo line, that doesn't make a lot of sense. So this way you can substitute your that certificate for a silhouette. Yeah, for me, it was my fourth, fifth great grandmother whose or fourth great grandmother's Civil War affidavit that she was a widow from the Civil War, even though he never returned. Nobody knew where he was, but I found him. But yeah, I did. Cool. Buried in Camden, South Carolina. Wow. So I tested that with my own. So I added, there's a fan chart. So instead of my face, you get my fan chart. But if you're wondering, well, how do I do that? So you can just, if you just add more photos to your profile and the images, then they will show up in this drop in this list here. Or if you get if you just tag yourself or your tag your ancestor to a photo that's anywhere on wiki tree, go to the image and you add that person's add that wiki tree ID as a tag to a person in the photo, then the app will pick that up. So you don't have to upload it directly to the profile. It just has to be uploaded somewhere on wiki tree. And you just add the printer ready? Well, when you go to the next page, once you've customized it the way you want, you go to the next page. The top part there, this is what you would, you would copy that. And you, there's even a copy button that'll copy it automatically for you. And then you copy the wiki markup, copying the wiki markup. Yes. The wiki, the wiki text. So I'm going to go back to, I'm going to go into my own profile again, add that. And I'll show you where's my edit. And did I not go into edit mode? Edit please. Oh, you have an uncommitted draft. Oh, because I was probably doing the exact same thing when I was testing. So I'm going to put it at the very top of my bio because like everything, it's my bio is long winded. So there it's at the top that wiki text all about gobbledygook. And then if I hit preview, you can see what it will look like. There it is. There it is. Oh, nice. I have one on my profile right now. Yeah. Yeah, me too. Now the other thing I just added, and this is the second. Yeah, this is cool. I love those. The second thing is if you wanted to put this somewhere else, I've added a feature, a box down below, which gives you the HTML code. So like sorry, he's like a he's like a Christmas self all year round. So now you can copy and paste this into any web page, into a blog post, anywhere else on the web on the web that you want to show off. And because the default is to add the live links. So if you paste this, if you look in here, there's code. So it'll make a live so when someone clicks on the link to the person's name, it'll open up their wiki tree profile wiki tree profile. So another way to promote wiki tree all around. And what about it being printer friendly, you can cut and paste it. What I would say, I guess the easiest way would be to use a just to do a screen grab screenshot screenshot. Yeah, I don't I don't have it generating a PDF automatically. You just made Azure exceptionally happy building links back to wiki tree. Yeah, that's right. Just like that math. Oh, that's so funny. People keep asking me to do the social media, Lisa. Anyways, did I put the link to the photo lines in the chat already? Someone did. Good. There we go. Anyways, that's it just the segue, the segue was just too smooth to ignore. You know, I love that you do all this stuff, Greg, and we appreciate you so much. You've made you've built on you've embellished wiki tree so nicely. Thank you. Thank you. You're very welcome. You embellished my life so nicely. And I'm going to talk about some social media stuff right now. Let's see if I can get my screen dish to share again. Let's see. Present. Share screen. Sorry about that, folks. There we go. Share and add to stage. There we go. What's happening around wiki tree in 2024? Let's see. This is coming up on the very last week. So this is the 27th of April. So nothing happens from the 28th of weekend chat. That's what is today's date? Today's 27th. So the weekend chat goes through tomorrow, I guess. But otherwise, there's nothing else happening the rest of April. 29th, 29th, 30th. Yeah, no, nothing, nothing else. Oh, look. New membership. Yeah. Well, I was just looking. There's nothing listed in the activities. I just thought that was funny. But there really is. You remember Q&A with Betsy Koch coming up on the 28th, on the 30th, wiki tree tours, living relatives, and new invitation system. So if you were watching today or you were watching last week and you still are a little confused about this, check out the wiki tree tours with Aon, Julie, Betsy, and I've forgotten who else, as maybe Sandy. Sandy. And then there's the link builders challenge on April the 30th coming up. So that's fun. And over to the social media page on the ambassador's project, we can scroll down and check those out. So we want to go to week of Sunday, April the 28th. Randy Seaver takes the wiki challenge. Love Randy Seaver. Love him to death. So if you want to find out more about Randy, who is a big wiki tree supporter and a professional genealogist, check that out. The cemetery spotlight is going to be Nimity Bell Pioneer Cemetery again. It got shifted from last week to this week. So lots of love there for that question of the week will be coming up the wiki tree tours. We already talked about it with all of the gang. One Name Tuesday will be Blackwell. And of course, if you want to share any of these, you've got great links going to all of the different social medias. Sorry, I don't mean to give anybody vertigo. Blackwell is the One Name Tuesday connection combat. We'll see what it is next week. Holland Marsh, Ontario is the one place Wednesday. Where is that, Greg? It's in between Aurelia and in Toronto, down the 400. Cool. Project Showcase, One Place Studies is coming up. That's a fun one. And since One Place, Holland Marsh, Ontario, I bet they talk about it in the project. So the connection finder, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame spotlights coming up. Friday Night Bingo with Sandy Paddock. Women of Science. That's the noon one. And then historical Notables is the 6 p.m. Meet our members. We'll be posted and then back with us. Link time. Well, you'll be back with us next Saturday. So not a bad thing to do. Thank you, Aowyn. And for Az and Lisa and Chris Fabriello, all of the people on that team that get this stuff together. What? Oh, look at that. Ah, the Wiki Tree Tours on your left is the Appalachian Project. Boom! Oh, moonshine again. Chris. All right. So that is your week in and Wiki Tree. And we're so glad that you've been here with us. And we'll see you next week. See you next week. Thanks for coming. Bye. Okay. Bye.