 Our unit is conducting our annual training at Camp Ripley. We're very much like a regular unit during annual training. We start around 06, and then our training will either go 24 hours or index around midnight. We have flight operations throughout the period, depending on weather and depending on other training conditions. This is my first AT. It's sort of been hectic on me because I just got back from AIT not too long ago. So I'm trying to learn as much as I can before I go back. We have four LUH-72s that have been doing flying missions around the local area. PR lanes are an opportunity for us to conduct personnel recovery because we fly a lot and in places where there might be opposition forces, we have to be prepared to conduct ourselves on the ground if we have to land. It teaches soldiers how to survive, communicate, where to go to get help, and how to find their way out of a problem if we find ourselves in one in the future. We have just thoroughly enjoyed our time here at Camp Ripley. We were looking for a training area that would allow us some maneuver space to test our capabilities, both in the air and on the ground, and this fit everything that we had. So my job with the unit is the medical NCIC for the battalion. We do everything from real-world medical coverage to planning out training for all the medics in the battalion. So I've never seen training like this done before, and I really thought it was good because it was helping our pilots and our medics. I was actually a casualty at Mystic, so I got an IV. My job is to support the battalion. I'm learning a lot more right now because of AT, and my NCOs have been teaching me a lot. They make me want to learn and continue with my MOS and just progress and be a better 92 Yankee. I love supply. It can get hectic sometimes. You're always busy. We're the first one and the last one out. It seems like our unit comes here every few years, and every time we come it produces incredible results. I'm sure we'll be back. I am excited to get home, but I will miss AT.