 So this is a smoker. It allows us to get close to the bee hives. The honey bees will smell the smoke and hunker down, let us do our job and gorge themselves with honey in the event that it was a real fire. They would have enough honey in their bellies to survive for a couple of days out in the wild. And this is a simple hive tool, a little crowbar type of mechanism, allows you to get in there and pry loose the inner cover, which is loaded with this orange stuff called propolis. It's a gooey antibacterial type product that the bees use to seal up holes. It's used, I understand, to coat open-heart surgery patients' ribs after the surgery. So that bee, and there's another one. These bees are being born. There's 21 days after the queen lays an egg, they're getting ready to be born. There's some pollen. If you can see the white, that's the larval stage of the development of an egg. And all the shiny stuff is nectar. And with the smoke, you can see the bees gorging themselves with that nectar in the event that it was a real fire. And all the outside is capped honey. So this is a beeswax capped, and this is a porous cell capped for the babies. Yes, so the hospital is interested in a healthy food product that's made sustainably and responsibly and locally. And a beehive on campus here is a local, sustainable, and healthy honey food product. So I'm glad to be a part of it. And these guys here have been great. We started with two beehives last year. We added another couple this year. The bottom boxes on the beehives are where the queen hangs out. That's a brood chamber. The top boxes are the honey supers, and that's what we'll harvest. I pulled honey from these hives a couple of weeks ago. So the top boxes came home and we extract them in a centrifuge. We put them through a simple sieve and into the jars. No heating or adding or subtracting. It's all raw, pure honey. These hives did exceptionally well. I got probably, we did almost three harvests, three full harvests. So we did about 150 plus pounds of honey out of these two hives this year. It's an amazing number. It's the best we've done. And we're getting bees up in the area. These bees will fly two miles in every direction from here. So they're helping everybody in the neighborhoods, gardens and plants and flowers and trees. They're providing pollination services for over 8,000 acres of property within this area.