 I had an inquiry from Claudia from the Mazangira Center here at Illry. She was looking at partnering with somebody who could help to get the information out about how to use livestock manures in a way that reduced methane emissions, etc. Kenya is a big country and we just don't have the reach or the people to get to each county. For us, the idea was how can we train trainers with important agricultural practices to improve their livestock production. I started the Bora Bora Soil Advocacy Programme predominantly because the Bora Bora guys have motorbikes and they have tablets, they're enabled, they can get to places, most of them live on farms, those are the country, they have families that are farming. The training then required that they teach their plus one and then on from there they teach in their community. We're trying to teach these farmers to make what we call biocomplete compost, which is compost that has a massive diversity of different soil life, so you know really comprehensive soil biome, so that when we put it back into the ground it helps to strengthen our soils, improve the structure of the integrity and allow our crops and our soils to grow with the symbiotic relationships that they always have. So, what is your approach to making biocomplete compost? It was in Afia and Zuri, and it was harvest, a very big yield. From two bags of maize, it was part of 25 Ecarimoda. Afing been trained and taught on regenerative agriculture. We embarked on growing maize without plowing land, which was something very new to us. The second one is without using the synthetic fertilizers. Compared to what I have always been doing the other years, and even last year's harvest, I'm expecting a very successful crop, facilitated by compost, and a very little cost. For us, a possibility in future could be that we actually also help train them. In training people like today, they got the measurement tape to train farmers to how to take the hard girth. To estimate body weight for the animals and see if they're growing and so on. So these are intervention points where we can maybe train them, then they can train their plus ones or other trainers even, because we already have trainers of trainers years. Well done. Today we're rewarding the best undersoil livestock keepers. For those individuals that are here, they're stories. The cost of production, of producing an acre of most crops today, is anything upwards from 13,000 to 50,000 shillings. Using soil biology, you bring that down to under a thousand shillings. It's non-comparable.