 Right. Get back out of here. Temple, if y'all wanted to come on down, we're sitting here, we're placing on location. We went all the way down to the Floyd County line, checking brush piles, what we could. Then we have guys, volunteers on kayaks, going in and doing more in-depth search on the bigger brush piles. Well, we're using boat teams with drags. We've got Kentucky Search Dog Association here with cadaver dogs. Alpha Fire Department, Prestonsburg Fire Department, Miller D. Shelby and the Fire Department. We've got a couple of boats down there that can take you fishing wildlife. I also got the KSP's helicopter in the air, also searching numerous volunteers searching and also got Kentucky National Guard's helicopter. It's on its way to help search with a FLIR. They have a FLIR system that can help us locate any possible. Yeah. Yeah, sometimes you don't know the point last night or the last known point, and in this case we have a good idea of where that is, and we're starting there and working our way down. The kayak was a little further down from where the shoes were. So the dogs independently working separately, both indicated in the same area, and we've taken them back down today since last night to see if they're still hitting in the same area than they are. So we're concentrating our efforts in that particular area. The river conditions are optimum for boat operations right now. It allows us to get over the shoals if we need to and work in shallow areas that would normally not be able to get into. Minute by minute and hour by hour, we're still actively searching. We're hoping for the best, planning for the worst, and I've been doing this a long time and as long as it keeps going on and nobody hears from him, nobody knows anything. It's usually not a very good outcome. We're going to try to bring him home, and the family deserves that.