 Through this gift, we will generate, create an enterprise, an infrastructure, a platform where students and academics, policy makers and private sector stakeholders, as well as common citizens will come together to understand the relationships between animal health, human health, environmental health under the lens of one health. One of Winchism's great passions is the welfare of animals, especially the welfare of the cattle that she was raising. And one of the reasons she donated the ranch was to make sure that that continued. And the expectation is that it would be maintained as a working cow-calf operation. So what's happening is that the research is kind of fitting into the activities at the ranch. Same thing will happen when it comes to educational opportunities. If we want the students to get experience checking on pregnant cattle, that'll happen when it would normally happen at the ranch. For research, it's a great opportunity for the vet faculty to perform clinically based practical research out there that producers can use, as well as to give them opportunities to collaborate with other faculties, such as people in the faculty of medicine, business, engineering, looking at new technologies, as well as environmental concerns. It will allow the community to be involved, so we will be able to bring out young children between kindergarten and 12th grade to come out and learn where their food comes from and how their food is produced and how the beef production system actually works, as well as provide an opportunity for 4-H students to come out and learn about current beef production systems and producers as well to learn about the cutting-edge research that we're doing here at the University of Calgary to improve beef cattle health and welfare. The opportunity that the donation of a ranch provides is just incredible. It really is a gift for everybody in Alberta in the sense of learning more about the cow calf industry, so it's an incredible donation from a very generous family.