 Thank you, Nicky, and thank you, Purser, for putting today on. It's really great to get out in the field and actually demonstrate some of this agtech that's being used here and other agtech farms. Nigel's stolen most of my thunder today about swan systems, so I'll probably keep it brief because there's other sessions to go and then there's lunch to come. But effectively, swan systems is a complete irrigation and nutrient management system. So we're not just looking at a soil or a vine or a satellite image. We're bringing everything together, so it's a holistic package. It is a software. We do not supply hardware. We utilize existing hardware, or like this farm, we have Harvest, Centek, ICC Pro, which I guess you've heard from already today, but we bring in their data through the back room. Water is not involved in actually gathering all that data, but we bring it into our platform and through a whole series of algorithms, we make some sense of it. So here we're bringing in the data from the different data sets, whether it be soil moisture probes, irrigation controller, fertiliser that's gone out, water analysis, and I think there was a question earlier today to Nigel about looking at salinity going into the soil. We do have drainage algorithms in our software, so you can actually use our software to create a leaching irrigation to get it through to further down. Satellite imagery drone, we're looking at the actual weather. Now that could be a weather station on site, or it could be one nearby. We're also looking at the forecasted weather, which we drag in from bomb in this country, as we use IBM, et cetera. We then, during our setup, we will look at your crop type and growth stage, your soil types, what weather sources you've got, whether you've got a weather station on board, or whether we need to look at one nearby or in neighbours. We create your nutrient plans with you or your agronomist, and we create water budgets. Water is key anywhere in the world, but particularly if you're coming off the bill locally, we can help manage that irrigation allocation you have from Bill. So we create irrigation schedules, we can track nutrients applied, system alerts, which is critical. We can look at your allocation status, which I've just mentioned, and also your crop health. Out of that, we can create any sort of report you want. If you can dream it up, it's createable from SWAN, whether it be compliance reporting, that might be sustainability reporting, water allocation, nutrients, budgeted against applied, and irrigation budgeted against applied. And you can do a full data load. Now again, the question's come up, who owns the data? The grower owns the data. We use it for no other purpose than creating our dashboard or our management input, management outputs. And if ever the grower wants it back, it can go back to him in a CSC file or shared with another provider of some sort. As I mentioned, we gather in all sorts of different hardware information. This is just a snapshot of what we do. So up on the right-hand side, you've got all the different weather stations available. Soil moisture, as I've already mentioned here, is Sentec and Harvest. Forecasted weather. There's some of the other people we work with overseas as well. Satellite imagery is involved. Irrigation control here, it's marked from ICC Pro or from MoTeC Parkland. But any other sort of controller we can bring data in from. We can schedule integration. So another question earlier today was, can we push our suggested irrigation schedule back into a controller? Yes, we can. Our first one was Aquamanics, and that's down at Adelaide High School. The greenkeepers down there use a swan to create a schedule, and that automatically goes into the controller after they've given it a tick. There's no way in the world you'd want to go in there without actually looking at it. You might have a mainline problem, a valve out or whatever else. So the grower gets the right of the last refusal. Coming in development, we've got Taugal very shortly, the Taugal Dream. We've got the ICC Pro that will be coming very soon, and of course, the Dow Gold Tech. Plant-based sensors, we can bring those in. If any of those are applicable or a grower wants to have them in their irrigation decisions, we can bring them in. So in that plant-based sensor space, we work on a customer need. If a customer requires it, we'll bring it in. Again, it comes in through the back door, through the cloud or an API. But yeah, we can do it. One of the ones here of interest is the flora pulse. That's a micro-tensometer, which goes in the trunk. Probably more used in tree crops such as almonds, but it is usable in vines. The other one is the CSO logo there. It's a little bit like the anthena, or a lot like the anthena. It's a canopy temperature sensor looking at a whole panel. We've been working with them for a couple of years now. Just in closing, I don't want to hold you up for too long because I know some of the talks have gone over time, but in our management or in our algorithms, we actually look at the crop phase. So obviously, there's different water requirements for different crop phases. As it's done on this site with Mike MacArthur and other people, winter rainfall or winter watering is becoming more important. So we actually look at applying a little bit just in winter to keep things topped up for budburst. And then as the season goes along, our crop coefficients, which utilize the rest of the inputs, adjust the actual irrigation rates and recommendations. So in closing, I should have said my name's John Pargetta. I'm a great grower for 30-odd years. I know the pain points of great growers. Also here today is Tom Hatcher. Tom's a viticulturist. He has now joined us as our support person. I'll probably come and sign you up, but Tom will be the one that actually sets you up and then manages it. We are a subscription, but we don't just sell it to you and run away. Off a full support, ongoing support, and also training and any numbers of training. And during the growing season, we actually give you a fortnightly review just to let you know how you're going. We sit in the background and watch it. So if we see anything going wrong that you may have missed during harvest, particularly when you should be still putting some water out, perhaps, we'll give you a call and let you know. So we're over in the marquee. Come and see Tom and myself, and thanks again.