 I'm Hazel Thorpe, and this is Alison, and she is a lead person on the Adopted Drain. A Taring Flood Action Group is a group of residents. They came together after we had some serious flooding in Taring. Really, what it is, it's about being the buyers of your local community. So, if you walk past a drain and think, oh, that's looking very mucky, it's either silted up or it's got masses of leaves over the top of it, or it's just got general debris. Really, what can you do about it? Well, we're not expecting people to get down on their hands and knees, but if you are able to, with either a litter pick or a broom, just sweep over it, clear up some of the debris. If that is too silted up, it can always be reported online. If we know we're going to be in for an awful lot of heavy rain, Graham's very good as he emails everybody out, just as a little prompt, just in case that something, you know, missed it or hadn't thought about it, so that you just go out and perhaps have a little look at your drain, think, oh, yeah, no, that's not too bad, or perhaps could clear that away, that sort of thing. Also, we find that not everybody's got a litter pick at their hand, but we can loan out equipment, so that is on loan to people. The Adopted Drain, it does make people smile, it does get people talking, and I think that's great, actually, so I don't know, I think it's quite clever that the fact that more of us are talking to each other, we're making friends that perhaps we didn't, people we didn't know, it's really nice in the community, I think to get something like that going over such a simple thing. We're learning from our scheme and it's developing, we've actually involved two more other areas, Finden Valley are doing the same as us now and also just up the road to us at the Beckett Residence Association are doing that too.