 So out here, we've had a chance to come up here and work Nordic response. One of the greatest parts about this is being from Aviana, we don't always get the chance to come up in the Arctic environment. And so we get a chance to come up here and enjoy nature. So we've been here for two weeks during partly part-time training and also standing in alert for the Nordic response exercise. As mixed teams, part-rangers, part-PJs. So for us, the 57th is kind of a sister squadron. The biggest benefit, I would say, is the opportunity to grow our guys in ways that they're not normally have a chance to. You know, the Swedish rangers have a certain background and that skill set is something we don't normally practice. But being able to find that where our guys can piece in and learn from them and pick up that skill set has been phenomenal. It's almost frictionless working together by now. At a moment's notice, I would not hesitate that we could join them on their team or that they would take care of one of our guys if anything bad had happened. We are down to the name-by-name basis from Kuman to PJM Ranger. So we are close friends. What's really special to me and I know a lot of the guys share that same sentiment is the fact that we were here, we were together, we were doing operations. On the day where the Sweden signed in the NATO. We're psyched about it and our American friends even threw us a party. It's super, super special to me and I know some specialist is going to stay with the guys forever. It's been a great experience. I know the guys are cleaning a lot from it, walking away from a lot from it. I'm just delighted we could be here. It's been a good exercise and we're looking forward for many more to come.