 In Panama City, me and my company, we are out here training for deep sea diving. We have the opportunity to put guys on the stage, drop people deeper than we can in Virginia. We have clear, nice, warm waters out here, so it kind of gets us away from the garrison. Helps us with our logistics and planning, along with making sure that we're working up and we're ready for deployment. We're ready to dive deep and salvage something that's dropped or fix something that's broken, search something that needs to be searched. As soon as we put them in the water and their helmets are a wash, their lives are in our hands. We've got to keep air, we've got to keep gas getting to them. We've got to keep them safe on the bottom, direct them effectively, and make sure the job is accomplished and we get them home safely. The diving equipment that we're utilizing right now, we have the KM37. We can dive that to up to 300 feet. It's our heavy duty, our big yellow helmet that we use. To get us ready for deployment, we're going through emergency drills for all of our first class divers, our supervisor divers. Basically what they do is they put us in a hole and they tell the entire side, we're going to mess them up. So hey, you're going to go down and you're not going to feel right or you're going to cut your leg or all of a sudden you're going to go unconscious and it's just a bunch of different situations that you can run into on a normal, uneventful dive that you as a supervisor and you as a mobile diving team need to take care of. Everybody operates effectively as a team. There's no one person on the team that feels uneasy about going to somebody else if they need something and everybody knows that they can rely on each other for anything. So if you ask me, are we ready for deployment today? Absolutely, we're ready yesterday. And we're going to knock deployment and anything else the Navy gives us out of the park and anything that the Navy has for us, we're going to accomplish up and beyond.