 This training is important because it helps us to get our time down. It builds morale. Repetition increases skills, home skills, and so in a deployment situation we're not lost on what we're doing. We need good crews, and so we find out who's best within the platoons, and we assign the certain sections such as EEP, the trucks that come down here, we have a short crew who drops and retrieves our loads, and then we have our boat operators pick up and go out. And then we have build crew who is retrieving those loads as they come and then putting them together. So we did two kinds of work wrap crossing today. We did a seven float and a full float. So a seven float is five base two ramps. We build that, we load it up to two CVTs, which is our truck equipment. We wrapped it up in one slip across the planks and second slip, and loaded off those two trucks as anchors. We broke that seven float up, so the ramp went to the other side of the near shore. And therefore that allowed us to start building our two rafts for the full closure of that stuff to come. One raft. What was really amazement to me was the new talent. When I saw these new soldiers that come straight from AIT, or they're never being able to build and I was able to see their potential, it was definitely eye opening. It's the fun part where people get to see and get to see what they accomplished. You get to see what happened, what you built with your own hands and your own sweat. It's just really productive for us.