 If I can speak in that space to our wai, he wai, he wai, he wai heringa tangata, he wai heringa fenua, he wai rua, he wai ora. And so water is the BB beginning of life. And for us in Māori dim, water was the one element in life that our people understood and knew, was the essence to who we are and who we become because of our bodies being. And I don't know whether our ancestors actually knew to the limits of what percent they placed on our bodies being water. But that element of water itself comes from our ancestors in the heavens to the monga, to the mountains. And it is from those mountains that flow those waterways of life, those tributaries. Each of those tributaries had a sustainability of natural and fresh water that our people, like all indigenous people, never took for granted but respected in a relationship one on one. So there is a proverb or wakatoki that says koau te awa, ko te awa koau. I am the river, the river is me. That speaks of that uniqueness of the relationship between our people and life. With the understanding that that water body that makes its way out to the seas, to the lakes and then creates those underground aquifer, a role part and parcel of our oranga tolu tanga or our continuum in life.