 The word veteran to me means someone who has prior served their country. There's no higher honor than being able to call yourself a veteran. We're losing these veterans by the day. So to hear those stories firsthand by actual someone who is there and seeing it with their own two eyes and experienced it is huge. And you can read about it in history books and see videos, but to actually feel the passion that somebody had when they were first there and some of these guys actually get teared up reminiscing about it, it really hits home. I got aboard a minesweeper in Brisbane and we would go out there and we would sweep the Great Barrier Reef, the water channel between the Great Barrier Reef and Australia Mainland. We would sweep that for mines. When we got time to prepare for the next place while they were preparing for it, the minesweeper went to the next place. There was always a first one there. But we never had no trouble out of these Japanese because we were too small, too insignificant. They didn't have any idea of what we were or what we were doing. And they saw us every time they seen us. The biggest difference is just the conditions. The conditions that they lived in to the conditions that we live in now. Back then it was definitely a lot rougher, I would say, than it is now. We had just came back in to Admiralty Island and all of a sudden we heard an abandoned explosion. We've heard her alive and we still haven't heard nothing like it. The water happened. There were eight ships sitting here like this and the repair ship was right in the middle and the rest were freighters and Navy ships. That whole damn water blew up. Some of the stories that the guys and even some of the ladies there have are timeless and priceless. They're really inspiring some of the stories that you've heard. A lot of those veterans don't have any family left. So holidays, birthdays that they might have coming up, they spend them alone a lot of the time. It's unfortunate that part of life is people passing away and you lose your friends and you lose your loved ones, especially as you get older and age. So by us coming there and even that one hour a week, turn their day right around, turn their week right around. So think about it like that. When you go there, think about your grandparents and your loved ones that you might have back at home. And it's kind of nice. Some of the bonds and relationships that we've made there they make my day better when I go there and I know it makes their day better. So it's definitely a positive thing.