 It really gets you out into nature, you know, when you're wading through a river and you're knee-deep in the water and you're catching fish, you're close. And it just becomes, it's an escape, but it's a lot of fun. It's a great exercise. And you can combine that with Wikipedia. I like to write about the history on Wikipedia. My name is Mike Klein. When I was first started Wikipedia, I started editing on some articles related to the business size in, which is strategic planning and consulting. And quickly learned the conflict of interest rules and other things and ran afoul of some of the community norms. Once I got over that hump of just, okay, I understand I'm part of the community now, then it became very easy to go into those areas like fly fishing and Montana history and Yellowstone and things like that. That I was very familiar with, knew a lot about. Starting when I was a kid, I started buying books about fly fishing and fly fisherman. And I have a library of about 600 books of, you know, fly fishing literature. I spend 25 to 30 days a year in Yellowstone and it's just, when you write about it, you're really writing about personal experiences in places that you know intimately. I take the same path that the Blankford Peterson expedition took across the Gardner River and into Yellowstone for the first time in 1870. And even today you can stand there and look one way to the north and you see Gardner and Electric Mountain, which wasn't named in 1870. And you stand and look south to Rescue Creek and it looks exactly the same as it did in 1870. And you've read about that. You've read about these guys walking through there. It's a little off track, but if you look at the economics of Wikipedia and you look at the balance sheet and the income statement standpoint, the income is the volunteer time. For every hour and there's an hour spent. So there's no profit in Wikipedia. The equity, if you look at a balance sheet, it's the content. It's that nearly 4 million articles right now. So any waste of income, waste of volunteer time, right? In building the equity, those are the things we need to improve on, is to use that volunteer time wisely to build that equity line on the balance sheet, which is the content. This is a unique way to volunteer 24-7. So that's just on its own. It's a unique way to volunteer. But it's also a great way to learn how to read, write, and solve problems. Collaborate.