 and call them fighter missions. But annual training is where we bring it all together. It's kind of a culminating event for the year. Currently working on patrol-based operations, deliberate platoon, night and day attacks, and basically working on setting up defensive battle positions. Those two weeks, we are able to come together as the O311s and the leadership. They get to put what they know into action and actually get to move the pieces around of the puzzle. And it's important because during a regular drill, you don't have enough time to actually put the plan into action. But now that we're here for these two weeks, we actually get to put the plan into action and see it unfold. And it makes us more fluid as a unit. Some of our junior Marines, they're actually stepping up and actually seeing things happen and put plans into place. And they're coming out of their shell to an extent. And they're not the intimidating more. They're making tactical decisions. And it's helping them grow. Super important to get out here and break off the rest. Being in reserves, we have multiple poles coming at us. We've got our civilian life. We've got our family. We've got the requirements here in the reserves. And training's done. We all get done with training when we get pushed out to the reserve units. But just like any kind of skill, shooting skill, swimming, the more you work on it, the better you are. You don't work on it. And it gets rusty. And when that rust gets knocked off, we start working together to shoot as a company and as a battalion working together. And you can't see the difference at all when it comes to an active duty Marine or a reserve Marine. Once we start doing left, right, left, or we start going through and doing patrols or anything else, there's no difference. And that's what's amazing right there. They love it. They love training like this. It sucks sometimes, but it's what I think deep down all of us join the Marines for.