 It's mostly my grandkids. I take them out on a land. We work on cutting meat, working on hide, traveling. That's what I do with my grandkids. So they're learning from the early age. When we go out, they get really excited to go out there. So that's really important to me. There's nobody out there that's teaching them. So I'm working, but then on my time off, I'll take a few days off just to take them out there because nobody else is gonna do it. So and they're excited to learn the culture stuff. So it won't die. The education is important too. But then to go out there on a land is very important. We have to keep our land and for the future, for the next generation, we have to keep our land and make it a life by traveling on it all the time. Making a use of it. If they can go out there, they can go trapping or even teaching them how to trap. Now that those traps that they make are so dangerous, but then once you catch on how you set it in, it's easy. It's important that they can make a living out there. They can go education and out on a land is very important because like down the road, like what if there was no more fuel for the power and what they're gonna do. So it's really important that they know how to survive out there too because that way they're in town and then what if everything shut down and there's you have to get your own wood, you have to get your own water. That is really important because then what if down the road there was no more fuel for to run the power corp and stuff like that and you know like at least they know how to survive out there that way. So that's why it's so important for me, for me to teach it to my grandkids. They're getting the education and then plus to survive so it's good that they know both. Like right now for me, the moose hide and the caribou tanning, all those are dying, slowly dying. I don't know like for this community, like I don't think there's anybody here to do that. I think just me I'm doing it. I don't see anybody else like working on those stuff those caribou hides and they all get thrown away and I don't see anybody else working on those stuff. So in a week I'm gonna take some young girls out to teach them how to cut hair because that way at least we could cut the hair up and throw the freezer and then another project we could do the the rest. Yeah so that one is dying that I know. Like long time ago when when I was a child I seen all my grandparents and other elders working about today I don't see anybody. So that's really important that that don't die in our language. Every day there's somebody working on wood, there's somebody going to nets, there's somebody going hunting, there's somebody going to like every day you're doing exercise so every day you're busy, every day you're exercising, you can you can just stay inside and sleep and watch TV. There's always something to do outside like there you could you could go on a screw you could go on a go hunting, trapping go go visit your cabin, go fishing, you know like everybody goes in a fall time across to Arbery Lake and string a net and take about a three, four hundred fish out, not even a couple of hours. So there's all kind of things to do. In ten years probably this generation will be if you take everything seriously they will still be carrying on that what what we're what we're teaching them like the trapping and the school gets funding for trapping to take the school kids out so that's important to us and like every spring the school take all the kids out to out on a land so in ten years those those young people yeah but if they're carrying on that same like how how much how important is the land and for them to continue to look after our land and the water