Well, I mean, I don't know. I've never been to a village of cottages in North Canada. I don't suspect that it's as diverse as Texas is even in the hunting offseason. But certainly, so really, what you're saying is when deer season happens, all the women leave your village? But here, you just like all the white women who are normally there leave the village. And you go back to the cities that are diverse. Here in Texas, we were very diverse state. I don't know people outside of the outside of my state out in the United States, I think don't always believe that. But we are one of the most diverse places in the country. I don't know how that compares to Canada. I've not been north at the Mason Dixon Line very much my life and y'all are way north of the Mason Dixon Line. But way north way north. But what I found, it wasn't just that numbers wise, it's dominated by white men. It's dominated by white men, because of our youth, America's particularly racialized history, when you kind of think about it just kind of if you're just like a kid thinking about this, you're like, Okay, well, if humans eat meat, they have to hunt. Right? Like, if humans you learned in school, there are dinosaurs that are carnivores or dinosaurs that are herbivores, and they're dinosaurs that are omnivores. Humans are omnivore animals. In your child kind of thinking through it, you're like, Okay, so like all humans, at some point must hunt. So it doesn't make sense that hunting would it doesn't make intuitive sense that hunting would be such a such a specific demographic of like tall white men who are rich in usually land owning white men. But because of our particular history, where we pretty much killed all the indigenous people who hunt we in that's in the West, right? We black people in America in the United States. I don't know what the history of Canada was by people, the United States were forcibly brought here. And they had to hunt because they weren't given enough calories, usually by their slave owners, you know. And so they were hunting, but then after we freed the slaves, it turns out that that we passed all these laws to make it so that it was nearly impossible for black people to hunt because people were sore about it. They were sore about slavery. So they wanted to somehow force black people back into slavery, like can we just have like, Okay, we were not gonna have slavery, but can we have something kind of like it? You know, that's what they were trying to do. So all these black folks who were freed now, they were just kind of go out into the land. It wasn't public or private land, it was just land you know, people had not kind of come up with this ownership thing with like, absolutely every square inch of land must be owned and generating income for someone whether it's a government entity or an individual person or a family or something like that we hadn't come up with that concept yet. But we came up with that concept, because we were trying to make it impossible for freedmen to just kind of go out to the woods and start their own communities and recover from slavery. And people who could hunt would hunt and sell their extra meat and sell their, you know, the pelts of these animals and things like that. And they did not have to participate in the white economy until all these laws passed, where they could do that. And in the northeast, it was immigrants in the northeast, they did the same thing. Immigrants who brought their hunting traditions from all over the world came to North America to you know, build their American dream. And we outlawed pretty much everywhere, everywhere that they hunt to. So everybody that was hunting in this continent, if they weren't a white male, a war a wealthy white male, even, they were it was either they were either genocided or outlawed. And that's why it's a white male thing.