Hi, I'm Holly and I'm Hailey. Welcome to Mountain Mysteries Tales from Appalachia. Well, welcome back everybody. Welcome back.
Hailey, I tell you what, I had a really great Halloween with my kiddo. Nice. Yes, he was dressed up as a fireman. Oh, yeah.
Awesome. I don't think I've seen pictures yet. You will, I will send them. Oh, it's just been like a crazy time.
He did tell his teacher at school she'd asked a couple weeks ago, you know, what are you gonna be for Halloween? And he said, a fish. Oh, so. And so she tells me I hear he's gonna be a fish and I said, no, he's gonna be a fireman.
And so she goes back the next day and she said, a little birdie told me you're gonna be a fireman and he goes, no, I'm gonna be a fish. I don't know where it's getting this way. He's convinced he's gonna be a fish. Right, so he was not a fish.
He was not. He's never been a fish. Um, you know, so anyway, I thought, but now he was a fireman this year and he took it very seriously. He has fireman boots and, you know, it's the whole thing.
It's adorable. I love it. Yeah. Yeah, we see pictures.
Yeah. Yeah, our Halloween was good. Um, we had just gotten back from vacation on Sunday, Halloween was Monday. Yeah.
So it was a quick turnaround. Um, and I live in a neighborhood where there's like three to 400 sugar treaters. Oh my gosh. So you know, 20.
Yeah, it's just kind of pandemonium, um, on our street. But you know, good candy, by the way, we do. Um, we give out the, we actually do a little like treat bags. So they're, um, they have like candy and I would also have like stickers and like, oh, little spider rings and I should have had you saved something.
Yeah, I think we may have a few left up. It'll be a Thanksgiving candy. This was the first year that, um, you know, I couldn't say, oh, it's for you. But actually the candy was for me.
Right. Now that he's old enough, he was like, mama, it's mine. Yeah. So I have to fight for it or at least you don't wait until he goes to bed.
Right. Right. All right. Well, what is this episode about Haley?
So we are going to go to Virginia, this week in Virginia a while. We haven't. And I just was on my research, stumbled across the story. And I was really surprised we actually haven't talked about yet.
Um, and the fact that there was so much information kind of out there about it, um, actually most of my information, if not all of my information, came from an article from the medium, um, which is a really cool like blog site, I think is kind of how it's described. Um, but this one was posted by Jen Baxter, Jen Baxter. And pretty much if you want to go and read her article, it's a lot better than what I'm about to do for you here. You're not supposed to say that.
You're supposed to say, you know, listen, listen, listen to this. And then if you want more information or just want to read a very well written article that's very researched and great, they'll read her. Okay. Okay.
So we are gonna go to Jefferson National Forest in Virginia, which is a part of the, uh, Appalachian Trail runs kind of through and around that area. This part of the Appalachian mountain range. So, let's go to 2009. Good year.
I was 12. I was 25. I was 12. Um, so I would have been in, oh, not as a sixth grade.
It's probably teaching. Yeah. It was at first year in middle school. Super cool with my cracks and my sweatpants.
Um, but in 2009, August 26th, 19 year old David Metzler and his girlfriend, 18 year old Heidi Childs, decided they were going to spend the afternoon slash evening together and enjoy the warm weather. August and Virginia hot. Enjoy the warm weather. No.
No. In my mind, it's enjoyed the mosquitoes and the sweltering, pervigions. Yes. Yes.
David and Heidi were high school sweethearts and met at church. They had been dating for about four years and were just kind of known to be genuinely sweet people. Like, everything that I read that described them, just kept using the word sweet. Like, they're just sweet people.
It's nervous. You know, you meet those people that are just like that and you kind of hate them a little bit. And no one has ever said that about us. Right.
Never. Never. I don't think I've ever been described as sweet. I've also never been described as sweet.
Yeah. No. When I think of like a sweet person, I think I have a girl in a neurologic with, um, who was just literally the sweetest person, always happy. Literally wore an actual flower in her hair every day.
And I hated her. I loved her. Like, they've down, but also I was like, I don't understand. I love the confidence that people like that have that they don't allow others to get them down.
Yeah. Because a lot of people are trying to trip them up and, and you know, sad. And she, it was, and still is, we're still face with friends. Um, but literally the nicest person I've ever met.
And I was like, I kind of hate you a little bit, but I also love you. Exactly. So much. Just was one of those people like, is one of those, I keep saying was because we talk about murder, but it is one of people.
Um, when you see the articles about people who've been, you know, murdered, like, oh, they just light up the room or whatever. And so many articles are like that. And I don't know if post-mortem and like, you know, when someone dies, we always went to remember the good things about them. So that's what we focus on.
But it does seem like the good guy young. Right. Yeah. Savannah's not dead.
Sorry, Savannah. Okay, good. She's good. She's good.
And we know, we know, you know, just from that, that both of us will get a long time. Right. I know. We get it.
Cause only the good day of who I'll live forever. So they have very kind people in like, sweet, sweet people, nice to everyone. And we're very active in the Virginia chapter of campus crusade for Christ. That's a lot of C's.
So a lot of C's. I don't love a crusade part. But the Christ part, get it. Yeah.
Yeah. All right. Um, don't know what they were about, but I'm sure they did things. Um, sweetly, sweetly, sweetly, did things.
David had told his roommates, he was a sophomore at Virginia Tech, um, in living with some, some brands that he was going to take Heidi to Caldwell Fields, which is in Jefferson National Forest. David knew the area pretty well. Um, he'd been on a church retreat there over the summer. His plan was to pick up Heidi at her apartment and drive to Caldwell Fields.
Once there, they plan to, you know, hang out. David brought his guitar. They're gonna have a fire. Um, just me hang out, chat, talk about the fire, play some music.
And then the plan was to come back to their harness. David picked Heidi up in his dark blue Toyota Camry. Heidi told her roommates the plan and that she would be home later that evening since she did have some homework that she needed to get done. Caldwell Fields was about 15 minutes from campus.
It's a pretty popular tourist spot in the summer, but it's kind of hard to get to. Um, pretty isolated. Had no paved roads, very few amenities. So not one of those campsites or, you know, pull off areas that has like the nice bathroom.
Not, not any type of glamping. Right. The paved road, the picnic spots or whatever. Not that's not one of those.
Yeah, I can get behind that. Um, this was not that. So David parks his car in an unpaved parking lot off of Craig Creek Road, which was almost seems. Craig Creek Road at Caldwell Fields.
Yeah. Yeah. So that night, Heidi did not return to her apartment. Her roommates were a little concerned because it wasn't really like her to not come back.
But they also were kind of thinking, okay, well, maybe Heidi stayed the night that David's apartment. Like they got back to the apartment. Didn't want to come drop her off or, you know, hang on, do whatever. Stay the night.
Whatever. With David. Um, however, when she didn't show up the next morning and all of her calls went to voicemail, her roommates started getting a little bit more concerned. That would be like, highly unlike her.
Right. Not like her that would worry me. Um, yeah, if you told me we're going into the woods and then I couldn't get a hold of you. If I told you I was going into the woods, you better check my temperature.
What is wrong with the trust me, if I were going into the woods, I would be calling you. I would be like, can you hear me now? Oh, God, you know, I would like to be honest, even if I go toward, you know, any type of high brush, I'd be called clearly immediately. I was like, I need to mow in here.
Oh, listen, you're just under an overpass. You're gonna be fine. Why under an overpass? You'll hang out under overpass.
Not since I got home. Not since college. It's not a college. Where I was always underpass.
We're all the fun stuff happens. Oh, overpass. Gosh, I know. Um, well, unfortunately, David and Heidi were not under the overpass.
Um, oh, I, I, I don't know how I responded to that. Yeah. Um, David's roommates, they also were kind of concerned when he didn't show up that night. Like he said he was going to, but like Heidi's roommates, they thought maybe David stayed with Heidi.
Yeah. So kind of the case of, oh, well, they're with so and so and so and then, like, I don't know if you ever did, I never did this as a kid. But when you and your friend totally judge parents that you were going to stay at each other's house and then you went to like a party in a field. No.
I again, field woods. Okay, you're a city kid. Yeah. See, I was a farm kid.
We're going to go to a party in a field. Yeah. That sounds. Yeah.
You park into like a dirt road and you walk to a field. Oh, yeah. There's usually no hodowning. Oh, I think there is.
Well, I think there is a lot of hodowns happening in the field. Usually there's like bonfire type situation. Yeah. But teens, which is just recipe for exams.
Yeah. I mean, were we thinking, were they thinking okay. So yeah, they're kind of saying each other's place or maybe, you know, doing that Swippie Swop thing. You know, they're actually in the field.
Right. So I don't know kind of what the thought process was, but they thought they were with each other and it was ended up not being where they were. So David's roommates, again, kind of like Heidi's roommates started worrying the next morning when David didn't come back. So they called Heidi's roommates to see if David was there.
When the roommates realized their friends weren't with each other, that's when the real panic started to sit in. I was like, oh my God, where are they? David's roommates were, you know, trying to stay pretty calm, reminding each other and Heidi's roommates at self-inservice and Jefferson was pretty spotty. They were thinking that the car could have broken down somewhere and they may not have had service to call for help.
So David's roommates set out to look for them. And I'm sorry, but if I'm going to the woods for any reason, they're better of the self-inservice. What if you break a bone? No.
What if you like trip and then you're out there? There's so many variables. There's so many, what ifs. Yeah.
And I also appreciate that they were calm about it, but they were also like, girls, girls, like chill. It's probably just this. It's probably like, you're just over-emotional, like you're over-reacting. It's probably nothing.
But at the same time, they're like, but we are going to go look. But we will go look. We're going to go look. We are slightly concerned.
Yeah, and well, I think that's that part of like showing to the girls like, it's probably okay, it's probably fine. And then the back of your head being like, uh, yeah, this feels icky. This is not great. So they have this plan.
They're going to go look for them. However, before they could even leave the apartment, they received the terrible news that Heidi and David's bodies had been found. Huh. That was astonishingly quick.
Swift. Yeah. A man walking his dog is always the talk- Oh, at least they- Oh, don't walk your dog. Oh, I see talk- Um, he had found their bodies early that morning in the parking lot.
It appeared that David had been shot while in the car and it looked like Heidi had tried to get out and run, but was shot just outside of the car. So to me, the way this red was that it happened kind of just as they got there. Like, I don't think they'd even gotten out of the car again. Or they were getting back in the car.
Right. Yeah. Because there was no, um, mention of like, like a campsite or like a fire site or anything. So, but there could have been and it just could not have been talked about.
I don't know. Um, a couple had no known enemies. Uh, everyone was shocked that someone would want to harm, especially these two really genuinely good people. Robbery?
Was there anything to see? So we'll talk about that. Okay. That would be my first one.
Right. And that was places for Yeah, we'll get there. Um, David and Heidi ended up having a joint funeral service. Heidi had been majoring in biochemistry and wanted to become a physician assistant.
David had been in the industrial and systems engineering program and had planned to become an engineer after graduation. Heidi was buried in a pink coffin next to David's dark woodwind. The two had talked about and had been planning on getting married. Um, and the family felt that it was right that they would be buried to next to each other.
Oh, which is just tragic. I just the thought of a hearing your child. Yeah. I cannot imagine the pain this family went through.
These two families, right? And you get them like, or they were 19. I mean, Heidi was 18, but like you get them to adulthood and you're like, I'm sure right. Like they're still that, you know, I mean, still, if I don't call my, but I haven't talked to my mom at least once a day, she thinks I'm doing a ditch.
Um, she raised an anxious child. It is what we are. Um, but she's not in the woods. She's not in the woods.
Yeah. Um, but I think there probably would be a sense of relief almost like, yeah, got him 18. We got him to an adult. Yeah, we could still worry about him, but you know, they were not responsible.
They're they're good. They're going to be all right. They're in college. They're doing their thing.
They're they know what they're doing. We've raised them well. And then something like this happens. And it's just how do you ever let your other children write a house tragic and unthinkable.
David's father and one of his colleagues began to raise money for reward to find their killer during the first stages of the investigation. The Montgomery County Sheriff's Office released very few details about how the couple had been murdered. Heidi's father was a sergeant with the Virginia State Police, which made things a little more complicated. Yeah.
But he made several public appeals asking residents to try to recall, you know, anything that might have been unusual about that night. The murders likely happened between 8 30 and 10 PM that night. Officials stated that several locals would have been attending Wednesday night church service. It was a pretty religious area.
So it was possible that they were actually on the road at the same time as when the murders were happening. So they may have passed an unfamiliar vehicle or heard something, seen something. Yeah, seen someone. Right.
Just kind of didn't belong. I know I live in a pretty, especially I live in a college town. So during the summer, there's not a lot of students there. So when you see kind of a weird vehicle in the area, you're like, Huh, who's cars that?
Yeah, especially on like the back roads that, you know, we live on. It's like, you know, everyone on your street, you know, cars in your neighborhood. Like, yeah, when something doesn't is out of place, you kind of remember it. So that's kind of what they were hoping for here.
Unfortunately, there was also a shooting range near Colville Fields. So residents were super used to hearing gunshots. So it wouldn't have right, you know, been unusual. Like, oh, my gosh, I heard that shot.
Or like, even do you remember what time you heard it? Yeah, that's true. So even that late, right? Yeah, it wouldn't have been a thing.
I mean, again, I live in a rural area. There are people hunt around. So like, are your gunshots right? I'd be very alarmed if I heard right, but right, and where you live, it would be more of a concern.
Yes, your gunshots were really wake them up. Yeah, I'm an alert. But no, like, I, we hear them regularly. So it's, I mean, it's something that I noticed on my house.
I'm shooting. But it is literally just that it's like, oh, somebody should. Oh my gosh, the second I hear something like that. Oh my gosh, it's gunshots.
They're like, now, car just backfired. Okay. No, I'm like, oh man, someone's trying to get those groundhogs out of the field. That's a common thing.
Like, really? Yeah, shoot them. You shoot groundhogs. I mean, I don't because I think they're adorable.
But when you have cattle, if you have groundhogs in the field, they make little holes and cattle can step in them and break a leg and then you're out like thousands of dollars because they're livestock animals. Yeah. So, um, you shoot groundhogs. My grandmother used to do all the time.
So when you see the hole, do you shoot into the hole? No, they, you shoot like, you see the groundhogs running around. Just aim and just, yeah, gotcha. I think they're adorable though.
So I don't shoot groundhogs. I don't shoot anything because I have just crying. No, but like people have squirrels and rabbits and, you know, or just shoot at targets randomly. Yeah.
And then the area not necessarily in my neighborhood, but, um, just the way the mountains are. I mean, they could be miles away on the deer. It's true. So, it's just not, you know.
Well, and things that would be unusual to me are very normal for you. Right. And kind of same thing in the series. Yeah, that's super normal.
Nobody would think anything of it. Yeah. So, I know when people are like, you're gun shots, you can think of it. Like, well, yeah, it's just a normal thing.
Um, it's just kind of a thing. It's like, you know, at least once a week I hear gun shots. Well, I mean, I think of the apple poh, though, then we're doing this podcast. Right.
Always wearing gun shots. Right. It's appropriate. Yeah.
Um, so super normal for this community as well. So obviously no one even thought twice about it. Nobody could remember if they'd heard gun shots, or if they did remember hearing gun shots, it'd probably didn't register for them to think like, Oh my God, I heard gun shots at 825 p.m. on whatever night this was.
So there was no, you know, useful or helpful information to provide it. So months went by with no answers. Tips slowed down, even though the reward had grown to about $70,000. The detectives believe that the crime was likely an act of random violence and that the killer had no connection to David or Heidi.
A year later, there were still no answers. Detectives followed up on more than 1200 tips. Detectives believe that the killer had to have at least been familiar with the area because of how difficult it was to get there or kind of know that it was there. Um, or have to know good anyway.
Right. Right. Even if they didn't know a couple, they had to be at least a little familiar when the area is with their thing. So maybe get a local right and they did look and there were no camping permits that have been issued for that area on that day.
Um, it's a camp in that area. Yeah. To have a permit. So again, it would make more sense that it would be someone who is, um, local who came in maybe for the day, for a few hours versus someone who was like, you know, from town's way, he was like, we're gonna go camping for the night.
Right. Yeah. Somebody who, or had been in the area, just open it out or whatever. It's always the drifter drifter.
Um, a year later, there were still no answers to, we already talked about that. All those tips. All right. Moving on.
In 2012, it was released that Heidi and David had been shot by a, and I don't know my guns, but the way it was written was a 30 30 rifle. A gun enthusiast will be in our comments though. Let us know because I have no idea. So we are uneducated.
We understand. We're not offended by it. Somebody though did send us a lovely email months and months and months ago about guns saying that we could email them if we had questions about guns and I can't remember who that was. So if you're still there with us, whoever you were, let us know because you did so very nicely.
We appreciate that. We're gonna need your help. We need your assistance. So shut up.
Okay. First of all, if the crime happened in 2009, why didn't it take till 2012, three years later to reveal, you know, the gun? I don't know. And I don't know.
Maybe they were just keeping everything they had pretty close to the best to, um, later in on. Right. Yeah. They also revealed though that they have gotten some DNA from the scene.
Really? From what? I don't know. Maybe touching the car.
Maybe. Yeah. I mean, the, and this is 2009. So we definitely had some more advanced DNA.
We had a touch DNA. Right. Procedures. So got some DNA.
Um, you asked about robbery earlier. Robbery was ruled out as a motive. Heidi's purse was taken, but David's wallet was not. So they're thinking that maybe whoever did this took Heidi's purse as kind of a student ear of the crime within the purse though was her cell phone, a digital camera, a credit card, and her student ID on a Virginia Tech lanyard.
Were they able to trace the cell phone? I don't think so. I think it was turned off. I don't know what the credit card was ever used, which is like, so maybe it could have just not did that.
Yeah. I mean, taking it and throwing out and nobody that were about it was none of those items that ever been recovered. Police stated in a 2012 press conference that they were looking for several different vehicles that had been seen that night and they'll kind of run through them pretty quick here. A green sedan, a dark blue Dodge caravan, a dark Ford Crown Victoria or Chevrolet Caprice, a red Dodge pickup truck, and a gray or green Pontiac Bonville.
I don't know any of those vehicles. So I do. First of all, these are all American cars. So not a Honda or Toyota in the in the bunch here.
Also a Crown Vic. Those were those like giant cop cars basically. Yeah. So I guess this is what when people were asked, did you see any unusual vehicles?
I guess this is what they came up with. Okay. And this was kind of a wringless. So I guess they're trying to figure out if anybody was on the road that night in one of those vehicles.
So they can be able to rule them out or. When the Dodge, you know, you're talking probably a family, you know, a pickup truck. It could have been somebody who's out there, you know, at the shooting range, target practice or, you know, hunting or whatever they do. Yeah, whatever they were doing.
You know, I don't know. But the last one you said sounds weird. Yeah, the Pontiac. Yeah, the Pontiac.
What was it called? Bonville. Oh, Bonneville. Yeah.
Yeah. So again, very similar in that it's like a nicer sedan sort of like it seems like when an older person would drive to be honest with you. Yeah. So they were saying, you know, if you know anybody who might have been in the area in one of those cars, let them know.
So even after, you know, all of this information, the case kind of sold out again. In 2019, there was increased publicity as a 10 year anniversary. You can roll around Virginia State Police announced that they were taking a fresh look at the case, which I'm sure they do every so often with cold cases. Yeah, pull them out of, you know, out of the box, just to get some fresh eyes and yeah, which is good.
I mean, I glad that they continue to do that. However, despite this, the case remains unsolved. Detectives believe that the DNA evidence will eventually be the key to solving the case, but they are going to need something to compare to. So this tells you that this individual is not an assistant, which means they haven't committed a crime that they have been arrested for post whenever we started taking DNA.
Yeah. So I would think that one of the best things they could do is the familial DNA. Right. And I wonder if the reason why I'm sure it's expensive to do.
But also maybe there's just not enough of it. Could be. The sample of the thing is a shot and don't waste it. Yeah, that would be really tough.
But it's a tough one. You know, just just as for these individuals who, you know, were living their best lives and were, you know, horrifically shot down and they're probably literally, you know, so in their families. Right. And it's like, there's no motive.
There's no, like, there's nothing that just seems like somebody walked up to these two, shot them in cold blood and left. And it's just so, I mean, these random acts of violence do happen, but they're just not calm. Right. I mean, usually there's some kind of connection.
It almost like gives zodiac or, right. So I'm saying we haven't seen more murders in the area. Right. You know, they haven't been connected to anything else.
Yeah. It's just it's odd. It's like, why? Yeah, why when you pick these two and you know, maybe it was like, this person was, you know, target shooting or hunting or something.
And then, you know, somebody, you don't expect on the road, you hear a noise and you accidentally shoot one. And then maybe the young girl gets scared and says, I don't know. But the fact that he was in his car also, to me, it seems like somebody walked up to the car, shot him. Yeah.
And she ran away, shot her shot her too. Because it from everything that, you know, as these two have been described, it doesn't seem like if even if somebody came up, you know, looking for trouble or whatever, that these two would have been the ones to get it back to him, you know. Well, and if it, you know, might go back to what you're saying about the Savannah, who you're like, Oh, I just hate her. But I just love her.
It could be that like, Oh, they're so darn happy. Well, let me show them happy. You know, so it could have been that kind of love, just someone was just really pissed off. Yeah.
Yeah. I don't know. It's just, it's so this is trouble senseless and odd and strange. Yeah.
I don't know. I would be, you know, I'm sure the family is, I'm sure they're just really advocating to what can we do with this DNA? What can we, you know, yeah, I'm sure the family, you know, obviously still wants answers. And who's to say that the DNA is even the killers?
Right. Yeah, because we don't know what it came off of. What it came off like where the sample is from now, it could have been from the removal of her purse. Could have been, she had on her shoulder or scratched the guy back because there's no, because the way it reads is they were caught off card and it was just a random thing, but we don't know that for sure.
Did they fight back? Did they? Yeah. Who knows?
Well, thank you for giving me absolutely no answers. You're welcome. That's what I live for. Apparently very good.
Apparently. Well, Haley, this was a fast. Yeah. Thanks so much for bringing me waiting.
You're welcome. Yeah, as you can see, I'm enthusiast. We have literally no idea. Right.
Yeah. So let us know. And if you would like to do that, you can do so by emailing us at mountain mysteries dot Appalachian at gmail.com. You can find us on social media on Facebook at mountain mysteries tales from Appalachia.
You can find us on Instagram at mountain mysteries dot Appalachia. And last but not least, for a good time, join our patreon at patreon dot com slash mountain mysteries. Hey, do a shout out this week. I do give me just a moment.
And Savannah, if you're out there, please know I never disliked you. I have fond memories of us watching the hallmark channel together while studying for finals in a place on our university that called mind space. They didn't have that one. It was a little room attached to the library.
It was real sketchy, but it stayed up on the night. And I was studying for forensic psychology. And lo and behold, there's Savannah with her gorgeous blonde hair and her bright flower in her hair. And I was like this girl.
It has her shit together. And we studied and we watched, guy can run the show, was hallmark. When calls the heart from the hallmark channel. I heard that I've never seen it.
Solid show. Solid show. It had a what's her face in it that was part of the college admissions scandal. Yeah, that really often people house.
Yeah, she wasn't it. Yeah, Becky, Becky, she was up. My daughter's on the rowing team. Yeah, terrible.
That was pre it was pre this situation. When calls the heart in this episode, Elizabeth gets upset when her daughter doesn't get into college. So she quickly takes a picture of her in the rowboat. Yes.
You know, makes it seem like she's on the team. Yeah. But you know, we made it out of there. Savannah and I and both passed those tests.
I'm assuming she did. I'm glad that you passed forensic psychology. I feel like this is what we do for a psychic. Yeah, I did.
I passed that class. I think with a B. So I was hoping for hire. But you know, I'll get it to you.
It's a tough class. The guy that taught the class apparently from the CIA. It's really cool. He was a on odd fellow.
One most star, right? But I very much enjoyed his class anyway. Let's take our shout out of the week to you to bland Virginia. Oh, I bet it's so exciting in bland Virginia.
Could you have places that have weird names like that? Usually amazing. I usually phenomenal. I wonder if it used just a little bit of butter.
A little bit of um, paprika, some of it cream. I don't know. Yeah. It's bland.
You went for a sweet route and I kind of went for well, I started with butter and I started working with you. I was straight for paprika. I was like, I was like, actually, I think you mashed potatoes in my head. Like when you think bland, I think like mashed potatoes.
I was on bland diet for about two weeks. So I thought it was awful. The brat diet. I was on the brat diet.
But I don't like, I did not want rice. Yeah. At all. I did eat some toast.
Bananas. I hate bananas. I know you hate a banana. I just, I want to like them.
It's a texture thing for me. I'm interested in like the texture of bananas. Didn't do bananas. I did a lot of toast.
It's an applesauce. Yeah. That's about it. It's about it.
Yeah. Did some baby food. Got a little like to go, like those. The pancake.
The pancake. How's ones? Could have offered you one tonight. I ate a few of those.
They were all right. The go go squeezes or go go squeezes. Yeah. But yeah.
So that's our story for the week. Bland Virginia. Let us know what your best towards attraction is. Is it something spicy?
I hope so. That'd be great. Let us know. All right.
Until next week. We'll see you. Bye. Bye.