 I received an email from Dave and Dave has some questions about our long range rifle experiences or lessons mentioned one that we offered years ago. And by the way, every year we change up our offerings and pricing and all that kind of stuff. But we did offer some years ago a three day journey to one mile training class. And since then, as we've gotten busier, we haven't been able to offer such low cost long classes anymore. We found that our niche market is in the person who wants a turnkey long range experience that wants to do it quickly. And so, yes, we can still provide the longer training, the three day training, but it is going to be much more expensive than most of our competitors. They're able to do it much, much cheaper than we are. So I'm not sure that we're the perfect fit for everyone. Everyone, Dave, I don't know. It looks like you're far enough along your journey that, you know, you're doing great on your journey as you're as you're going. So one of your questions was to get a new rifle for this type of class. And I would say no, I would say you said you had an AR 10 chambered in 308 caliber and that's good. That's, you know, it depends on what kind of groups you're getting. You mentioned that you got a point five nine inch group. That's great, especially a group of five. That's wonderful. That will take you out to, you know, you do great stuff at a mile with that. Even a one inch gun, you know, that lets you hit a 17 inch target at a mile or 18 inch target. So you don't really need the new gun. I think it's more about practicing the fundamentals and reloading. And I'm a hypocrite here. I don't reload, but serious long range shooters, you kind of need to reload. So I would say take whatever money you were going to put into a rifle and get reloading equipment. Train yourself up on how to do that. You know, see what kind of training unknown munitions in Idaho. Jake, he's he's a master at it. There are other people around the country. Go get that training. Do your own hand loading. That I think would be more important than a new toy as much as we all want new toys. I'm not a semi automatic rifle kind of guy. I like bolt actions more for long range shooting and ultra distances. But some people, you know, the better guns get the, you know, if you have a good group, if you can shoot a 10 inch group at a thousand yards, that's that's pretty good with your AR 10 or your bolt action, whatever it is you use. The point that I like bolt actions doesn't mean that they're the only way to go. I don't think that there are many people in the King and two mile club that are shooting semi autos. So there does come a point that it's time to go bolt action for extreme precision and accuracy. Yeah, as far as various caliber choices, I've enjoyed the 6.5 Creedmore for the last five or 10 years or whatever. They're they're great. They say it's something like 27% more efficient than a 308 caliber. So that's great. However, I think it doesn't hurt to learn on a 308. Get your first, you know, wear out one barrel with 3000 to 6000, whatever shots with a 308. Get used to it and then put on a 6.5 barrel on whatever you're, you know, your AR 10 or whatever. Get a bolt action. I love the old fashioned. I'm an old guy. I like the old fashioned Remington 700. But there are so many new companies that have, you know, their their new 2000 to $8000 custom precision rifles. They're all great. I'm sure the markup is pretty good, but I mark my training services up. So nothing wrong with that. I think any good, any good bolt action rifle that that's that's the way I would go probably chambered in 6.5 Creedmore. But again, it decides how far you want to go. If you want to go for over four miles, that ain't going to cut it. But if you're just going to be having great fun and my favorite distance is 1000 to 1500 yards. So if you're doing that 6.5 Creedmore is wonderful. It doesn't recoil that much, which I love. I hope some of this has been of help to you, Dave, and to other folks. I've just made a video for everybody for this. Hopefully this helps y'all and look forward to seeing you out there on the range.