Yes. With the upcoming 150th, I envisage a couple of things. One is exactly what you said—having location events all across the country under the umbrella of the national fiddling day but giving some structure to it, because we want to make it uniquely Canadian. With technology today, everything we do is generated around the world.
Let's take that a step further. We give it the structure of a national fiddling day. We add to it some key components that are uniquely Canadian. For example, we play two or three of the Canadian signature fiddle tunes everywhere across the country at the same time, on the same day. Then we add the components of uniqueness, the ethnicity, the varying styles. You would get the Celtic music of Cape Breton. You would get the musique folklorique du Québec.