 It's a nice day out. That load down, I was there for almost two hours. I was expecting it to be a little bit quicker, but that is what it is. We're still on time. We're just barely on time. So there's no time to waste. When we get there, we're gonna drive into the night. I'd say we'd be driving till the sun comes up, but the sun doesn't want to come up until later on in the morning anyway. So it'll still be dark when we stop. We're definitely gonna be pushing into the night tonight. I had to drive late last night, or should I say early into the morning, but we made it. And you know what? Every time I take my front tires off, I lose my inner hub cover. I've been on both sides. Wait, yesterday, but we, we did it. It was great. Feel good. It's too bad about the inner hubs, those hub covers on my steers. Every time I get my steer tires taken off, or I get someone else to work on the front, I mean, then again, it doesn't always happen. I find it so hard to get those hub covers to stay in there sometimes. They got those little pins that hold them in there. For some reason, they just, they like to vibrate out. I'm just waking myself up here. I didn't film anything going last night. I took the shortest route possible, which was up Yellowhead Highway 16. It's the other highway, TransCanada 16. It's a two lane road from Manitoba all the way out here, but it is, it was considerably shorter to get here. And since it was the middle of the night, there was no traffic. The only traffic was a bunch of deer. I had a couple of close calls. There was a lot of deer out on the road yesterday. Excuse you. A lot of deer out on the road yesterday, but we didn't hit any of them. We had our eyes up. We had our head up. We had our eyes on the road. We had a couple run across the road in front of me. I was able to avoid them. There was one that came pretty close, but like I said, there's no one else on the highway. I was able to have my high beams on. I could see it from my ways away. It started slowing down. Kind of figured it was gonna do something dumb. It started jutting out into the road, and then it ran back into the ditch, and then last second it ran across the road right in front of me again. By that time, I was prepared for it to do whatever dumb thing it was planning to do, because deer don't have a lot of brain, but they got enough brain to run. That's like their one instinct. They just usually run in the wrong direction. It's funny how that happens. Like running is a correct response. When there's a semi coming towards you, running away is the correct response. It's just for some reason, they always pick the wrong direction, and they run into danger instead of away from the danger. So, I mean, they're evolving, right? The next step in their evolution is to run in the correct direction. But at least they're running from the danger. Or towards it. They're running. I really don't like deer. I don't like deer at all. They're always in the way. I'm assuming in Australia, kangaroos would be the same thing, except kangaroos are hopping, and they're like giant bunny rabbits, or they're like deer that went to prison. You know, they're just jacked up deer that have been bred together in a lab with giant rabbits. They look pretty scary, and they look like little boxes that could box you too, and they're just ripped. So, I think hitting a kangaroo would probably do more damage, because they look heavier muscle-wide. They got more muscle mass, but same idea, right? Animals that jump right out in front of you. That's why in Canada here, we call it a moose bumper or a deer bumper. I'd like to get one for the front of my truck, then they just sort of bounce off the truck, and they save your truck from having to get an insurance claim and being put out of service. In Australia, you call them rhubars, right? For hitting the kangaroos. I mean, you don't hit them on purpose, but sometimes it kind of seems like they hit you on purpose, right? Like I was saying, the same thing, like the same thing with kangaroos. They're doing the right thing. They're running. They're just going the wrong way. So, thanks for hanging out, everybody. It was a really short vlog today. I know we started off at home, ran through the night. I can't show you much at night because it's completely dark, completely dark, and you know, I was just trying to get here. So we got here, we got here safely. I'll see you guys tomorrow for another day, for another full day when we start right here. So thanks for joining me. Remember, when you're out there on the road, keep your head up. There's deer everywhere. Keep your eyes on the road. Keep your stick on the ice. Pay attention and drive safe. I'll see you tomorrow.