so you get names like giacomini, gambini and dulcinea and all these. any names. what's interesting about this, the chapters own this landscape, like i said, from 1858 until the 1920s or so when the heirs to the original owners started to sell off. in an unusual twist of selling off to sort of outsiders, they sold off for the most part to the tenant. this is really one of those sort of classic and almost made up and it just seems like these never really happen sort of american stories, right? you emigrate to the u.s., you work hard as a tenant and eventually you become the landowner. very much that story. so many of the families that owned these ranches when the park was created have been there. and some of them that are still have been there for five or six generations, which for california is pretty darn old, you know for back east or in europe 150 years is nothing but out here. that's pretty unusual. around the same as this conversion from the chapter's owning the chapter family the land to the the tenant families owning it. most of the converted from producing