 The focus of today is to conduct basic airborne operations to develop currency and proficiency amongst all the qualified Marines. Number one. Number two is to build a relationship with our active duty components. We have some elements here of First Ancoe. That's a relationship that we want to foster. And then ultimately we have Fourth Maw who's doing the flying for us for both aircraft with types of model series and so it gives us a chance to integrate and coordinate with them and work with them. The reserve ancoes, the three reserve ancoes being third, fourth and sixth, are the only ancoes in the Marine Corps that actually have a assigned mission of maintaining airborne capabilities. But what that enables us to do is that allows us to work with our partner nations, other services, allies and provide our FIRE's expertise support to those units within those countries or other services that have an airborne mission, right? So if the Marine Corps wants Anglico to operate with the 82nd Airborne for example, we would be a great candidate for that because we actually have the jump mission so we'd be capable of jumping with them. And that's a unique mission set and then that doesn't exist anywhere else in the Marine Corps and it's very uncommon I would say across the DOD as a whole. Variety of training is key to everything. If you know how it's done during the day, close your eyes and try to do it. It becomes inherently a much harder to do and the only way we can overcome that difficulty is by continuing to train. We must be aggressive, we must be consistent and we must be more than proficient, we must be masters at what we do and the only way we're going to do it is by creating harder training. I think honestly what attracted me the most about being Anglico is the diversity. I had never been to a unit where so many different capabilities were still trying to do the exact same thing. Well, airborne capabilities have been a huge important task since I've been here. Making sure that we had a good parachuting program, making sure that we had a good HRS program and making sure that the JFOs or the JTACs are getting the appropriate training but it all boiled down to the same thing. Being able to seamlessly insert with other units and support them appropriately.