 So we've brought 14 students from the Gold Coast down here to Foster and the Great Lakes region of New South Wales. We're throwing them into the field and getting them to do some real-world field activities and get some research experience to round out their whole degree. And so that involves a number of projects both in Wallace Lake, which we're at now, and in Smith Lake, which is just a short distance away. The whole point of the capstone is to really teach students some real-world skills and give them an experience of what it would be like in the real world when they get out there and have to do field-based projects and field-based work and then bring those samples back and do lab-based analysis. So it is a complete package in that sense. I'm passionate about environmental science because it's this big interaction between the people and the environment they live in. A lot of people don't understand what I mean when I say environmental science. They're all like, oh, you're a tree hugger, but it's bigger than that. Environmental science is more for the people, actually. You can't beat it. I studied environmental science and in Australia it has such a just dynamic environment. You won't find anything like it anywhere around the world, so I figured it would be the best place to study. What I've noticed about Griffith is they really prepare you for pretty much career. This whole capstone experience is pretty much what we're going to be doing on the workforce, so it's a great experience to get out there and see what we're going to be doing.