 Fun swimming at the pool with these guys. You smell amazing. We've been a little spicy. I might try it anyway. A little too spicy for true love. We've been on the go all day, running 10 miles and then cooking sake in New York. And swimming. And so the swimming was amazing. So fun. But you know when you swim, you're like extra hungry. Yeah, you are. It's so bizarre. Probably because you're using your entire body to stay afloat. But anyway, honey, I did not get to fly the drone yet. Because of the rain. Because of the rain. I know it. Boy. It's coming. It's coming. A second flight for the day. Wow. A little spicy. I didn't quite. Actually, it's delicious. It's perfect. It's kind of salty. Really salty. I like it. I don't know if you can taste the salt. It's delicious. Now I'm out and about seeing my going, you know, I'm going to trip down memory lane in Kukksaki, New York, which I've been coming here for 33 years and I did not know what kukksaki meant. I just found out today. It's the hoot of an owl. So the Native American language that was here before the Dutch settled the Hudson Valley, there whatever the hoot. That noise. The hoot of the owl was called kukksaki in the Native American language. So that's amazing. I did not know that and I've been coming here for 33 years to visit my grandparents who had 10 children and so I have a very large extended family here in upstate New York and I just love the quaint small towns, just a classic small American town right on the banks of the Hudson River. My grandfather Leonard and his brother James started a telephone company. I believe before World War II, so in the 1930s and they were very successful and they did great and now that company has been passed down from generation to generation through my uncles and aunts and now my cousins and second cousins and because of their success, my grandfather loved this beautiful home right on the banks of the Hudson and it's just a beautiful white home that is no longer in the family, which breaks my heart but I'm hoping someday it comes back into the, in fact it's for sale. Hello, but it's a big house and a lot of upkeep. Anyways, it's just so great to be here and to remember our roots. I always try to come to the cemetery where I'm filming right now to visit the headstone and the remembrance of my grandparents, Florence and Leonard. So anyway, love you guys. This is Kutsaki. This is where I, this is, I would spend two to three weeks here every summer. So back to, back to family, family, family.