 Although we were owned by Falkenbridge, we'd always worked at arm's length because we provide services to the mining community at large. And even we did work for other nickel mining companies who might have been seen to be in competition with Falkenbridge. They were quite happy for us to work for them. So it was a very unique relationship for a company that was owned by a mining company that allowed us to work in that way. So changing to a private company never changed that client base in any way. We continued to work with them. Falkenbridge, certainly in those initial days, was a major client of ours. But certainly not our only client. They maybe gave us 10% or 15% of our business. So we worked mostly for Canadian companies in those early years. One of the reasons why we expanded and we did expand very rapidly was that in the mid-1990s, the sentiment towards mining was not good in Canada. I think the government in BC was very anti-mining and even Ontario was not very favourable. So up until then, a lot of our business had been coming from Canadian companies and we felt vulnerable. Canadian mining companies were moving overseas. They still kept their head office in Toronto or Vancouver, but they were starting to spend money overseas in exploration and we felt that if we were to remain viable as a private company, we needed to follow them. So in the only six or seven years that we were a private company, we grew very rapidly geographically. We started up laboratories in all the major mining companies of the world. And that was Larry's responsibility mostly. I mean we had a shared responsibility in that sort of strategic growth area. My responsibility was more on the operation side. So he was the chief executive officer and he went out there and grew the company very rapidly and gave me the responsibility of running all those acquisitions and integrating them into our global network. So we started up in quite short order laboratories in Santiago and Chile, Johannesburg, South Africa, Perth, Australia, Gala Halizanch and Brazil. And we started a small laboratory in Lima, Peru. So just in those four or five years, it was it was crazy busy. It was exciting. Very interesting. But also quite scary.