I speak only for myself.
I want to ask two questions, but before I ask my questions, let me reinforce this idea. Personally, I think it would be an excellent idea to have a team of veterans. Veterans range in age from quite young to quite elderly, and it might be a challenge to put together a well-balanced team, but I think there's a lot of value in that. I think it would be strongly supported by serving soldiers, because every serving soldier will eventually become a veteran. I think to forge those ties and to include veterans as part of this contingent would be a great move on behalf of the organizers of the Nijmegen march.
On the two questions that I want to ask, you mentioned that a number of interested teams apply, but only some are selected. Maybe you could brief us on the selection process. How does one decide, then, that these 14 teams are going and those 16 are not? The second thing I want to ask about is the training. You've hinted about the 1,000 kilometres of preparation, but maybe you could just walk us through some of the preparation and how that's broken down, perhaps in terms of time and miles. What kind of a commitment is one undertaking when one says they would like to go on a Nijmegen march?