Well, it comes right back down to William J. Ripple from Oregon State did a study it was on five continents. And I think there was like 30 universities involved it's called the collapse of the large body herbivores and and he's got a whole section in there on fire. And and what it says is that the the essence the takeaway is on every continent where they looked at the collapse of the herb avoori You know, in Australia that killed 4 million kangaroos. That was their natural Laos, their large body herbivore there on every continent they looked at, where you have a collapse of the larger body herbivore, catastrophic fire evolved every time. So this isn't like some sort of mystery. I mean, this is well known science. It's well published. Subtle science. When you get rid of your native species, herbivores, the deer, the elk, the kangaroos, depending on where you are. All that grass is growing, that was feeding them it just sits there is nothing. Fire will eat it. And if you lose your herbivores will be fuel for the fire is set up for the herbivores, right for them to live. And, you know, we're talking three and a half million tonnes of grass and brush it sits there now, waiting for the first lightning strike or some crazy human behavior train chain dragging power line down. The point is is sources of ignition. We can't control what we can't control as the fuel. Oh, yeah. And we do that by getting these horses Arctic fine, Matt, put him into these private wilderness and public wilderness areas and you release them there. And what do they do? They do what they've done for 4 million years. They reduce the fuel. They make it safer for the trees when you have a fire then it burns low and slow. And that's the natural fire that indigenous talk about. We need.