 So we see snow packs accumulate over the winter and hit their peak in the early spring and then the snow starts to melt off. When we have higher snow packs we tend to expect to get more volume of water coming off and that can lead to increased flood risk. The weather or not we actually see flooding really is dependent on the weather that we get during the snow melt period through the spring and into the summer. So we typically see the peak of the snow pack around about the middle of April where it transitions from accumulating snow to melting snow. So it's a little bit of time to see how much snow will actually end up with going into the snow melt season. Where we're sitting right now is near normal out through most of the province. That's slightly above in some areas. And in areas of the northern B.C. or on the upper Fraser or N'Chaco, Skeena basins we do have higher than normal snow pack and at some locations record snow pack for this time of year. Now whether that translates into flooding for the spring is really going to depend on what we get for weather during the snow melt season. So those areas in particular will be watching closely.