Thank you, Aaron, and good afternoon. Jumping right into our performance in the second quarter. Sales were $83.7 million compared to $114.9 million in the prior year quarter. On a constant currency basis, total sales were down 26%, while reported sales were down 27%. Second quarter sales in our Outdoor segment were down 24% to $40.1 million versus $52.6 million in the second quarter of 2022. If you adjust for the foreign currency exchange headwind, Outdoor sales [indiscernible] 23%. As Aaron mentioned, we are still constrained by lower open-to-buys from our key North American retail partners, due in part to their inventory destocking activities. Partially offsetting this decline was continued strong execution in our direct-to-consumer business at Black Diamond. Precision Sports sales were $25.8 million in the second quarter compared to $35.2 million in the second quarter of last year. In the quarter, we experienced broad-based discounting from our competitors and retail partners as the market continued to right-size inventory levels. Our ammunition business has been a significant headwind for the first half of the year on gross margin. However, we remain very optimistic that Precision Sports and the market will return to solid demand as we move to the second half of the year, supported by the upcoming hunt season. The Adventure segment contributed sales of $17.9 million versus $27.1 million in the prior year quarter. And on a constant currency basis, sales were down 31% and reported sales were down 34%. Despite these challenging market conditions, we believe we are starting to see stabilization in the market as sales were up on a sequential basis compared to the first quarter of 2023, and we expect to see sequential improvement in sales in both the third and fourth quarters of 2023. Rhino-Rack 's U.S. business did well during their peak selling season here domestically, and some of the cost actions we've taken have shown up in improved profitability for our Rhino-Rack business in North America. During the first six months of 2023, we moved to a new headquarters and consolidated our three previous warehouses under one roof in Denver for our North American business. During this period, for the first six months of 2023, we incurred over $700,000 of moving costs that should not repeat. Just to be clear, the Rhino-Rack facility in Denver serves as an under-one-roof solution for the entire Adventure segment here in North America, housing our North American headquarters, sales and marketing, warehousing and assembly. In Australia, sales were strong in April and May, but softened in the last few weeks of June as a result of Australians' observation of the end of their fiscal year. Importantly [Technical Difficulty] picked back up in July. While the market environment in our Adventure segment is still challenging, we believe the worst is behind us, and we look forward to reporting a business that produces better than 12% adjusted EBITDA margins going forward. Moving on to consolidated gross margins. In the second quarter, gross margins declined to 36.7% compared to 38% in the year ago period. We experienced a 140 basis point benefit from favorable variances in write-offs, but this was more than offset by unfavorable FX of 110 basis points and unfavorable product and channel sales mix of 160 basis points. From a segment perspective, gross margin at Outdoor was 37.5% in the quarter compared to 33.1% in the prior year quarter, reflecting a 440 basis point improvement. The primary driver here was the elimination of the high freight cost from 2022, not repeating this year. Gross margin at Adventure was 42.2% in the quarter compared to 38.5% in the prior year quarter, reflecting a 370 basis point improvement due to the operational improvement and cost actions taken in the second half of last year taking hold, as well as more favorable FX environment. Gross margin at Precision Sports was 31.7% in the second quarter compared to 44.9% in the prior year quarter, reflecting a 1,320 basis point degradation. This decrease in gross margins at Precision Sports was due to the sale of ammunition at lower margin profile due to the promotional pricing environment that the market is currently demanding. The ammo market has been very tough and has been a drag on gross margin. To put this in context, I want to share the following. During the first half of the year, we used internally produced bullets at Sierra and loaded Sierra ammunitions, selling a total of $4.7 million of Sierra ammunition in the first half of 2023. We only realized $236,000 of gross profit on these sales. Have these bullets been sold through Sierra's OEM channel, we would have recognized an additional $550,000 of gross profit, which would have increased gross margins at Sierra by nearly 700 basis points during the first half of the year. Once the market stabilizes, we would expect margins to normalize for our ammo product. Until then, we will continue to realize decent margins on our component bullet business. Selling, general and administrative expenses in the second quarter decreased [Technical Difficulty] compared to $35.4 million in the year ago quarter. The decline was driven by expense reduction initiatives in the Outdoor, Adventure and Precision Sports segment, as well as lower sales commissions and lower noncash stock-based compensation expense for performance awards in corporate. Net loss in the second quarter was $2.1 million or a $0.06 loss per diluted share, compared to net income of $3.8 million or $0.09 of EPS in the prior year quarter. Adjusted EBITDA in the second quarter was $7.3 million or an adjusted EBITDA margin of 8.7% compared to $17.6 million or an adjusted EBITDA margin of 15.3% in the same year ago quarter. The decline in adjusted EBITDA was driven by lower sales volumes, unfavorable product and channel mix and a $1.5 million consolidated foreign currency exchange headwind due to the strength of the U.S. dollar. These impacts were partially offset by the improvements in SG&A during the quarter that I just previously mentioned. Now, let me shift over to liquidity. At June 30, cash and cash equivalents were $11.3 million compared to $12.1 million at December 31, 2022. As Warren highlighted in his opening comments, free cash flow was outstanding. Free cash flow, defined as net cash provided by operating activities plus capital expenditures for the second quarter of 2023 was $12.3 million compared to $2.3 million of free cash flow in the same year ago quarter. We used this free cash flow to pay down nearly $10 million of debt and ended the quarter with total debt of $127.2 million. This put us in a net debt position of $115.9 million, resulting in a net debt leverage ratio of 2.7 times on a trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA basis. We expect to stay within our stated range of 2 times to 3 times leverage for the remainder of the year. Under our $300 million revolving credit facility, we have approximately $11.4 million outstanding and further borrowing capacity of approximately $32 million at June 30, while maintaining compliance with the required covenants under our credit agreement. Our inventories ticked up sequentially by $3.2 million to $149 million at June 30. As discussed in our prior call on May 1 of this year, this increase was expected. As of June 30, we've taken possession of key inventory, specifically at our Outdoor business for the prime fall/winter selling season. From a tax perspective, we have over $17 million of NOLs remaining, and we expect these NOLs to offset any federal cash taxes due in 2023. Now, let me move on to our 2023 outlook. We now expect sales to land within the range of $385 million to $400 million for the full year 2023 and adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $42 million to $50 million, or an adjusted EBITDA margin of 11.7%, assuming the midpoint of the sales and adjusted EBITDA guidance. We also now expect full year capital expenditures to range between $6.5 million to $7.5 million, and free cash flow is now expected to range between $30 million and $35 million for the full year 2023. Finally, for the third quarter of 2023, we expect consolidated sales to be $100 million to $105 million, reflecting continued headwinds surrounding the unwinding of inventory at our key North American partners, both at our Outdoor and Rhino-Rack USA businesses, and the promotional environment within Precision Sports segment. Let me pause here, hand the call back to the operator as we are now ready for the Q&A.