 So I'm Mason Crane, I'm a research and extension officer for the Australian National University Sustainable Farms Project. We're going out now to have a look at the progress of some of our research plots where landowners have fenced off farm dams, just to look at the progress and see how the biodiversity is going. We're out here on a property near Holbrook. We're on a farm where the landowners invested a lot of money into the infrastructure such as fences and roads, and one of the big highlights on this place is how he managed his farm dams. So they fenced off their farm dams, put hardened watering points in, which is having a really big impact on the quality of the water, the life of the dam, but also the biodiversity. Now it's been fenced off, they haven't once had to clean the dam out, the water stayed clear and crisp. Even through the millennium drought, it's still clean where the dams that aren't fenced on this place are going green, there's quite a lot of algae, and that has direct implications for stock health and stock performance. The project has been very heart-filling from a farmer's point of view. In dry times and times where you question your management, it's always nice to walk up through your tree lines and see that things are surviving, the cycle, the ecosystem still keeps going around and we're really only a rain away from making the whole farm do that. So it's quite uplifting doing these projects.