 Stop the sliding tour, we got this new dope van here, we're about to get to it. Our boy Jesse, you know, COVID this year, we're still able to get out here and do it, but it's a little difficult right now, trying to get over through the borders internationally. So we'll be riding for Jesse, thinking about him. We love you, Jesse. I miss you, dog. Earlier this season, I tore my meniscus, then I went out to bed, tried to get up a huge tabletop, understatted and lying flat. I got an MRI like a few days ago and it turns out I hurt my other knee, so I'm kind of chilling. We live for this. So let's go, slide into our strat. We can go look at the map. That's how we do it, baby. We're about to go to Bert and HQ to see how the board bindings are made. Maggie's going to show us what's good. We're organizing, so she's going to set up all these different displays. Very good. She did a great job. Got all the boards from beginning. Yeah, like legendary products. We're at the Craig Kelly Proto Facility. This is where we do all types of R&D, from bindings to boards, boots, everything. Welcome to the lab. This is where I work. All different types of crazy printers happening in here. This is where we build all of our prototypes, hand modeling, different types of assemblies. A lot of prototype modifications. That will be me. I'll be cannonballing, chilling. That will be flipping over me. It'll be sick. I've ever wanted history in these photos, too. I think this is strutting, yeah. Coming to Bert and HQ and checking out all this insane stuff at Craig's, where Maggie works and stuff, has been insane. All these machines are wild. I didn't even think about how much it goes into making the products that we ride and shred and break all the time, because it's just, like, shredding the gnar. Just woke up. I'm sure we can make it. Thanks, Bert. All right. We're about to go hit a spot with our little crew, the front heads. Maggie's brother and my friends. Yeah, should be fun. Getting there for the day. Maggie's super sick. You hold me there. Got to go hit this rail. Rebel side of the tour is going to be sick. Boom! Side and door. Day three. Just pulled up to the spot with the spot heads. We're checking out this long down rail in a park. It's going to be real fun. Let's do it. Special to me, because this is truly who I work with 24-7. Like, a lot of the season. I filmed the part with, I filmed my first part with him last year. Yeah, so this is the spot heads crew. Just hit to like that. Like, that's like the creative part. It's like you can do it all different ways. We're going through Bolton Valley tonight for a chill event, chill foundation event. I've actually never got to work with any, like, crews like this. They take people who don't have the money to, like, afford. They can't afford, like, snowboard gear. Like, season passes to the mountain. They take them to the mountain, give them gear, and, like, teach them how to ride, you know? Just, like, show them a good time. About to go hang with the chillers, the chill foundation, teach them how to turn and stuff. So it should be super sick. The chill foundation really started out as the idea of Jake and Donna Carpenter. Jake wanted to open up the opportunity to connect with snowboarding to other people, particularly people who might be having a hard time. This is Ryan. He is from New York, comes up here with the chill foundation. It is his 18th birthday, and he just learned how to do front 360s on flat ground. That looks good. It's so sick just to get to ride that. My God, the biggest smile on my face.