 Komenti forest in Uganda is a designation. Until today we don't have any officially or formally gazeted Komenti forest. It's informal but people hold them in that perspective. As I've already mentioned, it takes a process to register a Komenti forest and have the minister officially gazeted and declare it as a Komenti forest. We have a couple of them named like Ongo Komenti forest, but they are not formally recognized. How are people using them? People come together after realizing a need and an upcoming scarcity of a resource. They say alright, let's come together and take charge of this. So they start as an inform arrangement. They seek audience from the district forest office to support them. So they start organizing themselves as a community based organization. They start the procedures, bring a management plan and in that they clearly streamline what they are going to do. How to use what? For example, they regulate days of collecting firewood. Water is open access. You can go any time. Habs of water are open access. Pulse, they regulate. So they have put up committees that we have a management committee usually about nine persons who are supposed to regulate how we use this particular resource. They also partner with NGOs in particular districts to do some enrichment planting. They do boundary tree planting for some of the cases that really have in Masindi and Hoima districts. This is very evident. But as the main demotivating factor is when they don't feel their own. Because when you know you're doing everything, you're planting, you're protecting, they do patrols actually, but then you actually don't have the full right of this particular resource. Not until when you have that document, a land title and a certificate gazeting it as a community forest that they can go with all their energy and efforts to see this community forest operating.