 Cheryl, oh, I got a lead for taking an educational trip to Cuba. Oh, Cheryl, it may have to wait a few years until my son is out of school, but I've been looking for non-ngo leads for what an awesome... Cheryl, you will love the agriculture, lifestyle, food growing, gardening lifestyle in Cuba because in the 1990s, just a quick history, one aspect history of Cuba. When USSR fell, Cuba was the sugar basket of the USSR, right? So they used to grow a lot of sugar canes and stuff like this, provide sugar to US, you know, Eastern Bloc countries, right? When USSR fell, Cuba went through a serious economic crisis, the same way USSR did in the 1990s. Serious, hard fucking time, right? And the Cuban government, you know, tyrannical, centralized, it goes against what I like, right? But one thing they rolled out, right? They built community gardens everywhere so people would be fed, right? So I went to Cuba five times in the 1990s and I saw the progression of the gardening lifestyle, the community farming kick in to Cuba. It was fucking magnificent and because they couldn't get their hands on pesticides, everything was done organically, like it was organic before organic was organic, right? Like the whole fucking country became organic because they couldn't get pesticides, right? So they were controlling pests on their crops in Cuba, like food crops and tobacco and everything with spiders, right? I learned a little bit about this back then, but I've forgotten most of it, right? It was inspiring, inspiring, right? Cheryl says, yeah, that's what I want to see, plus the cars, beaches and food are too shabby. All of those amazing beaches. I met people that had traveled the world back then and they said Cuba has some of the greatest beaches in the world. The cars were magnificent, old school American classics. Everybody's a mechanic in Cuba. Everyone could fix their cars. They would jerry rig it and the car would run. Amazing, right? And the food, as long as you're not eating in, you know, hotel restaurants, some of the hotel restaurants would have been good, but people's homes and stuff like this, so good, so good, so good. I don't know what it's been like now. I haven't been there for 20, 22, 23 years now, I guess, right? But back then, magnificent.