 My parents were immigrants that came to Canada after the war and the government of Canada recruited a lot of immigrants for the mining industry. And so a lot of the mining camps like Milarnik and Sudbury and various other ones across the country had a lot of immigrant population, Polish, Ukrainian, Lithuanian, all of the different countries were represented. And you as a child, because you grew up right in the middle of it, essentially? Absolutely. I was born in Milarnik and... In mining, essentially. I was born in mining and in those days there was some houses that were given to the people that ran the mine, my father being a mining engineer, as I mentioned. He was trained as a civil engineer but did convert to a mining engineer because that's what they needed. So I was born in a house in downtown Milarnik and moved to a house that now is where a huge open pit is. The Osisko mine is mining the remnants of all of that basin. It's going to be the largest open pit gold mine in Canada. Where I lived is no longer there. They moved the entire town over and where my house was is part of the pit. It's almost symbolic. It is. It is. Just, there's a lot of symbolism in mining as you'll see later.