 Yes, so the construction manager, he came out and he thought, I think the thinking was that there must be an airlock in that heat exchanger. And so the floor wasn't getting through it properly. Not enough cooling water was getting through it. And so they figured that all they needed to do was crank open a little nipple that was basically an air bleed. Well, this guy went up to the end of the heat exchanger. This is a big horizontal shell and tube heat exchanger. And he was pulling on, he didn't have safety gear on. He was pulling on what appeared to be just a little nipple up on kind of the top part of that end of the heat exchanger. He was pulling on it and it let go and he was, the thing was full of acid. And so he had misjudged, he didn't understand what he was pulling. As soon as the acid came gushing out, he knew. And so this chap, I believe he had glasses on, although I'm not sure about that. He would have had a hard hat on. So that was just standard PPE for the site, you know, hard hat, safety glasses and boots and so on. But he was just in his street clothes and Namibia was a very hot place. This was Christmas time in Namibia, it was really hot. And so I think he had short sleeves on too. And anyway, this acid wasn't under a lot of pressure, but it was under some pressure enough that it came straight out right in his face. He hit the showers. He was, no, what happened? The showers were serviceable, I believe. Yeah, I'm pretty sure they were serviceable. What happened was his reflexes were quick enough that his eyes closed, so he didn't immediately get acid into his eyes. He got it all over his face and neck. I think the hard hat shielded a little bit, face, neck, chest and so on. He was, anybody that deals with acid, they kind of know what to do. So he didn't open his eyes. He knew that he couldn't open his eyes. He was shouting for help. Part of this is the story that was pieced together through this chap's story and others who ran to help. So there was one fellow that was passing by just at the time, and he ran to help him. The thing that was closest at hand was the plunge bath, and there was water in it. So in he went. By this time, I got down there, because I'd received word up in the engineering, in the offices. There were trailers, you know, where we had our offices. The word went around like wildfire, and so I tore down there. By the time I got there, he was in that bath, and people were manually splashing water on him. So there was water in the plunge bath, but we didn't have the hose in there with the fresh water supply. But at least there was water. Well, you know, I'm happy to say, I still think it's kind of a miracle that he survived and survived well. He, you know, they quickly got a hose pipe fixed up so they could do better than just using hands to splash water over him. Must have still ended up pretty scarred. He, well, it wasn't as bad as you might think. I believe he had skin crafts. He was, the first aid took over as soon as they got down there. It was all handled pretty fast. This was in 2003. So you know, everything was well set up on that construction site. They were well ready to respond, you know. He was flown out to, I guess, back to Johannesburg, I'm not exactly sure where he went, and kept in hospital for quite some time. And I believe he had some skin grafts. But at the end of the day, his sight was good. And whatever skin grafting had to be done was turned out fine. So he lived to tell a tale. He wasn't severely scarred. He was burned. But anyway, there you have it.