 I think my crew the most. Our flight mechanic, he spotted most of everything that was going on there. He spotted the first piece of debris in the water, he spotted the cooler with the fish in it, and he spotted the persons in distress. It was also our rescue swimmer's first case ever in the Coast Guard. He did an excellent job helping the people off the boat into the water so we could pick them up with our basket. It's a definite sense of satisfaction. This is the kind of moments that you join the service for. These are the kind of things that we're there for. This is what we do. When people are in need, we're the ones that are sent to help them. We love doing our job and we're there to do it anytime you don't need help. So it's definitely a sense of satisfaction and just fortunate to be the one in the aircraft that time. It could have been any crew and it just happened to be us. And I'll tell you what, we don't get that many perfect good feel good stories here with SAR cases. And when we do, we enjoy it because they had a rough night out there, but they had a really happy morning when we came and picked them up because they were elated. When we finally came by, took them out of a situation that was almost hopeless at the time. And it feels good. It feels really good to help them out in that way.