 Predator one, Predator one, this is Predator two. Any station, any station, Predator forward, radio check over. Public station be advised. We're gonna teach you how to be a communicator in a jungle environment. The jungle in and of itself has three main aspects. You have your foliage, you have your humidity, and then also your water. Every single one of those has a direct impact on radio communications. It's literally the entire jungle versus your radio, and you're pretty much working against everything that's around you. The limit to a field expedient antenna is really your imagination. We push out to the jungle, start sending up reports, nine lines, and moving locations. Nine seven, air panels. Nine eight, one U.S. military. Nine nine, uneven terrain, jungle. You don't know how deep you're gonna be into the jungle until you're there. You could be trying to talk to someone that's really high up, and you're talking to someone down low and you can't get them because they don't have their antenna high enough. Predator one, Predator one, this is Predator two, radio check over. Learning how to communicate in vegetation as thick as this, pushing out through these dense jungles, down trails, down mountains, out into this valley is unlike anything I've ever done before.