 Ah, good day mate, 40 here. So I made a bunch of blokes and a Sheila for a walk about this morning. So I show up at the coffee shop and I'm parched. And so I'm going to get a bottle of water. It's $4.50, mate, for just a bottle of water. Just bought some chewing gum, took $6 to the Kudji supermarket and asked, how much chewing gum can I get for $6? And the 10 piece packs of sugar-free spearmint, $2.50 each, but the bloke took mercy on me and threw in three packs for $6. So not cheap here, but Kudji, it's in the aboriginal language, it means smelly. So this place means smelly. I'm here at Kudji Beach and smelly because there's all this seaweed. So seal the seaweed along the shore. All right, so it means smelly. So where I come from in Kurumbong, near Morasset, it means the place of the flies. So I went for a walk about, we walked about 15 kilometers around Watson's Bay, very posh area of Sydney. We were walking for four hours. Ah, good time. Anyway, I just found out, even as a white person, you can join an aboriginal tribe. Like there's a process and a procedure and you can join an abo tribe. So I'm just out here in the ocean trying to figure out which aboriginal tribe I should join. And so just wondering if you've got any recommendations. What's the best aboriginal tribe for someone like me to join? Where would I feel most at home? So wherever I go in the world, there's an abo tribe with a campsite where I can feel at home. So even white people can find an abo tribe, join an abo tribe. There's like paperwork and everything. It's like, it's real official. Like top stuff, mate. So like you can be white, you can be blind, you can be a shield, you can be a bloke. Right, there's an abo tribe for you that you can join. And I'm sure they're great benefits and very reasonably priced. So on the lookout for the right abo tribe, meanwhile, I'm back in the ocean.