 Oh, thank you. Here's a traditional Welsh folk tune, which simply means Beside the Sea, and it actually comes from an old Welsh folk song, which is a very romantic thing. It's about someone waiting by the sea for that loved one to arrive. So here we go, Adelana Moore. I'm beside myself here for having me. There's Martin Lewis on guitar there. Oh, thank you. All right. From Wales to Scotland. I'll see if you recognize this one. It's the guy who had a somewhat popular beat group in the 60s. Thank you. I love this song the way Martin plays. This is great. Martin Lewis. All right. Kurt's going to tear it up here. Watch out. Watch out. Kurt Rogley, everybody. Lose on the case. That's for our buddy, Lou. Thank you. I'll do a tune of ours. It's called Cantor aguelod, which is Welsh for the lowland hundred. And the lowland hundred is a mythical sunken kingdom off the coast of Wales, not too far from where I grew up on the west coast. And so that was the inspiration for the title of this tune. And it's said that you can sometimes at low tide hear the bells ringing from the lowland hundred in the course of the tune. See, for me, Wales is a mythical place. That doesn't need another mythical place. Here's another tune of ours. Written about a particularly hot topic in Davis, and that is the turkeys. The wild turkeys that roam Davis. This is a song by... Well, why don't you talk? I got a tune. This is a song done by Bruce Cogburn, the great Canadian artist. And it's a song that Martin and I like, and we've adapted it to make it an instrumental. It's called World of Wonders.