 I think that's not it. In this main conference, I was actually... There are many experts who are involved in research, who are involved in using the available kits that we need in doing our business. I came mainly to learn more of how I can improve my production, improve my quality of my products and listen to where new methods, new things that I can use from the conference to take back to my business. You start your business man and they have their roles. For example, the researchers, they will educate you more. You can't know everything. Reaching our site gave an insight to skilled people, to professionals and they have been able to give us advice like they could just look at a mistake and tell you that you have to do this this way or this is not done properly. For farmers also, they try to identify problems that are encountered by medium scale pig farmers and they communicated back to me. So I'm going to communicate back to them so they are going also to benefit the small holder farmers that we visited. All the information has been given to me and I'm going to communicate back to them so it is really very, very useful. Of course, the tools that we went out to test in the field and then perhaps which are being reviewed to see how they can be more suitable. I think the tools are quite critical. I remember there was some heavy discussion just a few weeks ago as to whether the valley chain approach is appropriate in a small holder context and my own belief is that this is a tool and the tool depends on what you want to use it for and in this particular case I think what we want is information that can give us a benchmark and also that can get us to trace all the different actors that are within that chain and I think practically using the tool kit that we got from Euluri on the ground was quite a useful experience that I got. I also got quite some valuable lessons from the EADD project that is happening in East Africa of which we then cemented the theory that they talked about with the field visit which we had yesterday and where we had ample time to discuss with the participants in the daily valley chain and there were quite some interesting lessons that came out of that. In one of the places that we went to yesterday a woman there said that there is no support from government and I also discovered that in some places youths were not really really involved. One major reason I am interested in youth advocacy is I just see youth, I see that they have so much potentials they are vibrant, they are intelligent and a lot of them just don't know what to do the information is not there and just as I always see that agriculture as a whole is not attractive at least in my part of the world as in Nigeria but we need to be rebranded we need to make it attractive and again I also let youth know that you don't necessarily have to be a farmer if you are into ICT you can come into agriculture because you can use your knowledge of ICT to help us in forecast in getting market accessibility trying to also advertise our progress online and so on and so forth.