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But yeah, so you got all these pots, they're all tied together, and then your first run out of the year, you've got 200 of these things stacked on the deck of the boat. This is your first day. So on your first day, you throw them into the water. You start with the first one, and then it drags the next 49 with it, right? And you've got four strings of 50 pots per string. So you've got 200 altogether. And you go out in the ocean and you start dropping them at a determined location. You drop 50, and then you go to another spot and you drop 50, and you go to another spot and do the same thing until your 200 are done. Then when you come back the next day, there is crab filling about a quarter to a half of each of these traps. And once you get them aboard the boat with a winch, there's some string on there, and you let go of the string and you dump out the crab and measure them. And then as you're doing that, you're rebating, you know, with squid, those pots, the hooks that are in there, you're rebating them and stacking them again into your stack of 50. So once you get that done, then you start throwing them again off the back of the boat and fishing to the bottom. And you basically rinse and repeat every day until the season is over. And then at the end of the season when you haul your pots aboard and you empty your catch, that's it. And then normally then you go after shrimp. The shrimp are caught in the fall of the year, where cod is caught in the summertime. And scallops are caught earlier in the year. So, yeah, that was probably the coolest one I've had since computers. Like, picture the deadliest catch with slightly calmer water. And that was us. That's what we were doing. Back over to you, Kevin. V01, you, KZ.
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