 We camped at Mitur Dam and also the Kairas Dam in Mysore. That is a part of the country that's very familiar to me and I've spent a lot of time as a child and a youth along the Kaveri there. The dam is to the brim, actually overflowing. Kairas Dam is one twenty-four feet, eight inches and overflowing, whenever breeze blows it is overflowing over the dam. One lakh kiosks were being let out, initially three lakh kiosks and then one lakh kiosks were being let out on a daily basis, but in spite of that it was overflowing. So was Mitur Dam, one hundred and twenty feet full. So I asked the local guy who was living there next to the dam, I asked him, how many days did it fill up? He said, four days. I said, this is not good. If it rains heavily in Kurg, it would always take anywhere between twenty to thirty days to fill up, that's a good thing. But now it's filling up in four days, so for the first time, in fifty years for the first time I'm seeing that the Kairas Dam is brown in color, full but brown in color. This means the soil of the mountains is coming to Mysore city, which is not a good thing. Kaveri should come walking, but she is running, this is the problem. We need to understand the same amount of rain is coming in the last one hundred years, the average is same. Our only problem is we are not able to sequester the water that comes down in the form of rain, we are not able to put it into the soil mainly because there is no organic content and there's not enough trees and vegetation. If we plant these two hundred and forty-two crore trees, we can sequester anywhere between nine to twelve trillion liters of water. To give you a perspective of what is twelve trillion, the entire flow of Kaveri right now is twenty-one point two trillion liters. So twelve trillion liters extra if it goes into the land, the rivers, all the hundred and twenty rivers will flow, your lakes will be full, your wells will be full, above all soil will be damp most of the year and that is what is needed. For the state and the nation if you want a solution, the maximum landowner on the planet is the farmer still. It is he who has to go for it, why will he go for it? You want him to save the world, you want him to save Kaveri, you want him to save the nation? No, he is right now struggling for his livelihood. Now the only way it will work is that it must be an economic plan for him. This is what I have been looking at for over twenty-five years, now we know hundred percent. This is not an experiment on the farmer, we know hundred percent his life will change dramatically. Right now if you ask any farmer, you can do a survey and see if you want. Not even two percent of the farmers want their children to become farmers. So in another twenty-five years when this generation passes, how do you think you are going to grow food? The most significant achievement in the country is without any technology, without any modern science, just with traditional wisdom, our farmer is growing food for 1.4 billion people. This is not a small thing. This is the greatest achievement for this nation, but unfortunately their condition right now is very, very bad. Do everybody knows about the suicides and the stuff? This is a game changer for the farmer, for the soil and water and for everybody. If thirty-three percent of farmers or thirty-three percent of the land goes into agroforestry, we have calculated by eighth year the government will be earning twenty-nine thousand crores of GST. So it is wonderful for the farmer, it is wonderful for the governments and the governments are responding very responsibly. The farmer is very enthusiastic. Now the civil society is our business to see somehow we grow healthy saplings for the farmer. Two hundred and forty-two crores is a lot of saplings. There is no one department in the government, there is no one private agency or a commercial force which can grow this kind of number. And another problem is to grow quality saplings. When I say quality saplings, right now we have thirty-five nurseries you know happening in Tamil Nadu. These thirty-five nurseries we take nine to fifteen months to grow a sapling for transplantation. Many commercial nurseries are growing the same sapling in three to five months because they use a lot of urea and grow it, we're growing it organically. What is the difference? The difference is just this, when transplantation happens the survival rate is over ninety-five percent and in that the survival rate is around forty percent. And recently the Agricultural University of Tamil Nadu TNAU in Coimbatore which is a premier institution in the country invited forty different sapling producers in the state. The Yesha nurseries also went and of the forty samples that came all the thirty-nine of them had nematoid deposits on their roots. The only one without nematoid deposits was from our nurseries. This is very important because when you shift the farmer into tree farming, suppose you give him bad saplings which will not produce the result that we are promising him, then you are pushing him further into a horrible situation, another corner. So this is extremely important, this is why this forty-two rupee campaign is going on. This will need a minimum of twelve year commitment. Are you with me?