 The frightening part was it just happened so quickly. At one minute, one second, you're fine, everything's fine, and the next year are in deep trouble. That's what the shocking part is. It just happened so quickly. We were sowing our winter crop, and to fill up the seed cart, we have to get grain from the silo, and to do that we put the grain from the silo into a grouper, which is on the back of a truck and taken to the seed cart. I climbed up to the side of the grouper with a shovel to move some grain across to fit some more into the bin, and I just brushed my left arm against the shaft of the auger, but that particular position where I brushed it, there was a small bolt protruding from the shaft. Because it was rotating very quickly, it hooked my jumper and wound up my jumper into a tourniquet. I had a mobile phone, I had to ring somebody, but I was holding the shaft with my free arm, but I couldn't use the phone and hold the shaft at the same time, so for me to ring a number, I had to let the shaft go, and while I wasn't holding the shaft, I wound up my jumper and shirt even more so so that it began to even wrap around my neck. The first number I rang, there was a person which I knew wasn't far away, but he actually wasn't there, and so it went to answering machine. I thought, what a pathetic way to die. How it's all going to end up, I mean, I was having trouble breathing, I had only one more phone call left before I thought I'd pass out, and the brief chance that my mum might be at home and pick up and fortunately she did, so certainly with the situation that I've been in, what I've learnt from is the fact that all machinery that has a potential to be a danger to the operator should have a guard on it, and also simply carry a mobile phone with you whatever you're doing, wherever you are around the farm, particularly if you buy yourself. That's a small price to pay for, and otherwise a situation that could be very dire.