 Then this afternoon we came out here with a lot of our mannequin dogs and gave them the practice to do common first aid procedures that they might encounter down range or in a deployed environment on mission, so they could apply care to these dogs as their first responders in that situation. So we had a couple that are dealing with bleeding wounds, so stopping bleeding. We have robot dogs that simulate that bleeding so they can practice, including that bleeding, stopping it, performing bandages, getting simple things like vitals, so temperature, heart rate, breathing rate on these guys, doing stabilization of wounds, like applying bandages, applying a chest seal. So those are some of the common things that we are dealing with today. And then we have teams of handlers from Fort Rucker, Eglin Air Force Base, Hurlbert Fields, Peasley Air Force Base, Meridian and Gulfport as well, so we have a lot of handlers and then veterinary staff as well here for the training. I think it's really important because in a lot of situations down range we're not going to have enough veterinary teams in those situations that are able to apply first line care to these military working dogs, so having handlers trained in first aid care really helps us as definitive care for these dogs get that process started before they get to us in a down range situation. It's important because dogs like ourselves are always potentially in a situation where things can go wrong and when things go wrong you get injured, life threatening injuries and it's important to be able to bandage up our partners as much as the Navy tries to bandage us up too. I think it's just a good chance to really appreciate these teams coming together. A lot of these handlers are in different branches so it's kind of nice for them to also interface with each other since even though they're in different branches of the military they can come share their experiences, learn together and work together as a team.