 The reconnaissance marine shapes the battlefield for follow-on forces, so provide intel or information back to the force that's going to be coming in to do whatever they're going to be doing, array it, or a lot of times array it, or whatever it may be. So we provide that information and we shape the battlefield for them. For all the different, everything we've been doing in the Marine Pack has been different, but for the patrolling we were with CLT-1. The first five days, we did five days of amphibops, Hearst, and helocasting. Big heavy on the amphibops, especially small boat work, finning, stuff like that. Then we moved into helocasting. We did a full day of that, throwing cricks out the back of a helicopter and jumping out. And we did a full day of Hearst with the Japanese as well, doing fast-robe, spy, and repelling off of a CH-53. There's a little bit of movement, a little bit of pivots here and there, but for the most part it's pretty static. We're not running around doing IA drills or anything like that. So we would call it a square bay chute, basically, with 45s as well, not just M4s. Reconnaissance in the Art Canadian Army, they're a little bit less on the amphibious reconnaissance side. So when we did small boat work, that was some fairly new stuff for them. We've been working real well with them. They're very similar to us. And their reconnaissance has a lot of simliers to ours. So everything's been going pretty real smooth. Everyone gets along real well, and it's been a good experience.