 We're doing a thousand of the CDS bundles, the door bundle and they're just the barrels filled up with water right now. They drop out of the planes. Sometimes they're water, sometimes they're ammo, sometimes it's MREs. It's a lot of practice and to see our actual ability, it's interesting. Canada is here, France is here, so it's interesting to see comparisons. It's nice to know how the other people work because they do things differently than us, just the cohesion with the other nation. The communication is like in the real world, we're going to be prepared to work with the other country and get the mission accomplished. I dropped international bundles for the first time. The drops went extremely well. Mobility Guardian is teaching me a lot about things I didn't realize that I needed to know. I'm definitely enjoying the experience that I'm getting. My favorite part so far has been getting to just work with different crews, getting to know different people and get as soft as I'm used to. I'm aware it's a primarily Air Force exercise. My job would be to pack up my shoe, get my ruck ready and go find a door bundle and kick out the aircraft. So it's probably about 200 meters down that way, so my job's to go. I'm going to go to my team, go down there, set it up, just wait for some fire missions. I love it. Probably the best thing I've done in my career so far. Being such a small group and a small squadron, we don't often get multiple tankers airborne to fly together. So to be able to come here and associate with other tanker types and other tanker aircrew to find out how they operate, learning points out of that. The importance of our coalition is really important to us for both operations and exercises. So we need to train in exercises so that we can perform to our highest ability on operation. As air medical evacuation, we only see our small piece of the mission. I need to make air go lower to the ground. But coming out here gives us the opportunity to see the air drops and people forward deploying. So I think it's pretty cool to actually see something a little bit bigger than what we do at home station. Every jump is different. In this jump, we learn the new brotherhood and the new fraternal with your country, the USA Air Force and the USA Air Force. And new friends and we keep with the friends Pakistan and Beijing. I hope they come back again. The most important thing we can do when we have as many partnations in this exercise policy is try to integrate them into all facets of it. We're able to have British and New Zealand partners, SEAR guys out here with us as well. They just bring a whole new attitude, accent and experience to the table. We had earlier an Australian crew chief for the KC-30 come by and he told us about his job and how them as Australians have actually refilled American planes. And that just kind of puts the bigger picture, paints the bigger picture. We're not the only people in this fight and we actually do collaborate.