 Well, adapting to lockdown, like everyone else means, I suppose, having arrangements with your family about who does their work in which room. I think the first couple of weeks I had, my daughter was finishing off her work for our hires, so she had one room, so Meldrum Academy was in one room. My husband's a deputy head of Tariff Academy, so Tariff Academy was another room. I actually thought I had symptoms of coronavirus, so I actually wasn't feeling very well, so I didn't have the pick of the rooms, so I was banished to the bedroom, and I did most of my work at that point from my bed with quite bad symptoms. Now that I'm better, I've been relegated to the living rooms, so I think it's one of those things of having to arrange with your family because there's conference calls going on all over the place. So it's almost we've got our own mini timetable, so that's been quite difficult. Pass for working from home, I was actually quite used to working from home anyway because I run my own business before I was elected, so I'm quite used to working from home. And my teams have been very good, my constituency team have been great because we operate a very flexible office anyway, so we would do quite a lot of video conferencing as part of our week, so I think we've adapted quite well. I think it's a case of just recognising that you're going to hear noises off from time to time, you're going to hear a doorbell going and there's going to be a dog barking, but actually I think people are quite enjoying that aspect of things when they see you on television with things going on in the background. It makes us feel more human to people, that's a good thing. Like everyone, we are having to figure out a way to do our work remotely and using social distancing. Of course we've also had to look at our work programme and see what's necessary and pressing at this time and what can wait till after this emergency. Some of that's led by what the government feel is a priority in terms of legislation and some of it is discussions that we're having. So at the moment we're meeting regularly, I'm certainly, you know, I'm in touch with the committee clerks every day about decisions that have to be made, but as far as the committee members go, quite a few of them are actually in the category that they can't come to the parliament, they can't leave home for various reasons. So we have been using, like everyone else, the technology to meet informally to discuss things like decisions about the work programme and what to do, but we've also had a very successful live committee meeting. And I'm very pleased to say that we were the first committee to actually pass SSIs, which effectively were the part of the programme that we were going to be doing around a deposit return scheme. And we have very successful votes. We were the first committee, the first Scottish Parliament vote to actually happen successfully. So we're keeping in touch. We're meeting every week, whether it's informally or formally. And we, as you say, we've got one successful committee meeting under our belt. But of course the parliament are having to look at the capacity as to what they can actually broadcast. So we need to be very careful that we don't be asking for committee slots and things that aren't pressing. So we're prioritising our work and seeing what we absolutely need to do in public. And one of the most difficult things potentially is the stakeholder views. But we're working on that at the moment that hasn't actually come up as been a pressing issue right now, because we did so much scrutiny before lockdown on the things that we actually got in front of us. But going forward, we're working out how we can actually have our stakeholders in our committee meetings. You know, in a strange way, I've quite enjoyed it. That's no face to my colleagues. I come from a background. I used to teach live television. So I actually got quite a kick out of actually working to a script. It felt like old times. It was like directing a programme. What we did actually, just a little bit behind the scenes, the info, is that normally committee convener has a script anyway. So you make sure that you cover everything. What I did is I suggested that every member of the committee also have that script. So they knew what was coming. They knew what I was going to say. That was particularly, I think I actually worked to it, been really useful. So it's been fine. I think because committee meetings are very, very formally structured. No one really talks over one another. Everyone has to go through the chair in order to speak. It actually lends itself quite well to the Microsoft teams or whatever other software people are using for these online meetings. So, yeah, actually, I bizarrely quite enjoyed our first meeting and doing it that way. It was quite funny. I saw Mark Ruskell in the parliament and a socially distanced and had a conversation with him. He was joking that he felt that he had to type something in the text box in order to speak to me. So we're actually getting used to the online meetings more than actual conversations at the moment. Yeah, we have had very intense conversations about what we prioritise. I think because the priority for all committee and the whole parliament right now is the response to COVID-19. And I guess we looked at what are the most pressing things from our portfolio with regard to the response to COVID-19. It may appear to public at large that it's a largely health and economic issue, but of course it's also an environmental issue. A lot of environmental organisations and bodies are having to have their own responses to the pandemic. But we also were very acutely aware of some, well, we had legislation and regulations that were kind of halfway through, I suppose. I mentioned the deposit return scheme. We were taking lots and lots of evidence. We were at the point where we were actually having to have those regulations voted on in our committee. We were getting a lot of stakeholders asking where that was and how that was going to work and if it was going to be stalled as a result of this. So we had to take that into consideration and figure out whether or not we thought it was a priority or not, whether the government thought that was a priority. And of course we were just about to go to stage two of the Animal and Wildlife Bill as well. So we need to work out whether we can actually have our stage two in a remote committee meeting, which I'm confident that we're going to be able to do. Of course, in the backdrop to all of this, we've got the EU exit. EU exit is not changing according to the UK government. So we need to make sure that our work in the scrutiny of the EU exit and the impact on the environment, that still has to happen as well. I mean, we have got this pandemic, we've got this emergency situation, but we also have other situations including, of course, the emergency situation of the global climate change emergency as well. So one of the things that did change in terms of the government's programme, which impacts very solidly on the committee that I convene, is the climate change plan. So the updated climate change plan was due to be in front of us in the middle of April. So now the government has actually changed the focus of the climate change plan. It's going to be a green recovery. So it's very much going to have a kind of like climate change and the economy and the recovery from this pandemic. But with a real focus on reducing their emissions. They have said that that's going to be delivered by the end of the year. So we still have to work out a way to have scrutiny and oversight over that as well. And other things, of course, happened as well. COP26 has been cancelled. So these are all things that I think immediately we thought we still have to look at all of these things. We still have to find a way in order to scrutinise everything, to take evidence and to continue our work. And I think that we've actually been doing quite a good job in that, if I may say so. Because the Parliament and the members have all been up for getting that work done somehow. I'm going to do a double thing because there's two things. Obviously I'm really missing extended members of my family very, very much. Particularly my son, who's at university at the moment. I can't wait to have us all together. I think everybody will be the same. But the first place that I'm going to go is to Nubirah Beach, which is the place that I love the most in this whole world. But it's also where I usually take my dog and because I don't live in the village of Nubirah, I can't drive to go to the beach. I have family members who live in Nubirah and they're driving me insane by photographs of them taking their dogs to the beach. So the first thing I'm going to do when lockdown is lifted or any of the restrictions are lifted on travel to go and exercise is I'm going to go to Nubirah Beach with my dog.