 We in the MSG are going on a purple rain bivouac. The exercise itself is actually a capstone event. It's a culmination of a year's worth of home station training. So all the mission support group squadrons are going out to RAF Feltwell where there is a mock runway. There's a bare patch of land and they're going to go and establish an air base and potentially recover that air base. We've got injects and activities for all the security forces who's going to be teaching tactical movements, the comm squadron that's providing connectivity to everybody. We've got the civil engineers which are really going to give the infrastructure to the bed down force and be prepared to recover the air base as well. We're collecting data as well on our contingency tasks. Every AFSC has their own set of requirements and tasks that they need to be able to accomplish down range. Some of those tasks have to be accomplished in mock gear at some time. Those injects are going to flow and they're going to have to figure out how do I repair this water line or how do I recover the airfield but now I'm in chem gear. Gary Kendall, our secretary of the Air Force put out a memo and asked us what do we need to change? What do we need to do to be ready to go to war today if we were asked? Standing up this combat support training range, having Red Horse come out and build us a mock runway where we can actually practice recovering the airfield helps us but then we're looking at guard bases coming to use this. Guard bases within Europe to use this as a site that they can practice their contingency tasks so we're looking at a lot of different folks from all over the world coming to utilize this space and really test it out and see what capabilities we can get from it. This has been five months in the making and it is a significant investment from all of MSG but I think it speaks volumes to how important readiness is to this wing and to getting it right.