Thank you, and there we are, a little bit late, but feeling like the neighbours, what they say to him, ‘How are we today, gentlemen?’ Andy, how’s life treating you? Good, good. Yep, I’m down in uh Sunny Tauranga, it’s lovely, very nice, and mate, listen, hey, uh, what have you, uh, what have you been up to over the last couple of weeks while you’ve been down in the sunny Tauranga?”
“Oh, busy, busy working as always, of course. but what I’ve, what I’m sure the real interest in is, I thought people talk about all sorts of aspects of safety and things, but I thought I’d go and look more historically, the historical aspect of safety. So I’ve started reading all the books on safety, see there’s nuggets of wisdom that we’ve missed out over the years, and, I’m particularly interested in a guy called Trevor Coletz, who’s a bit of a bit of a legend in the safety space, and, I managed to acquire a weighty tome of his called ‘Critical Aspects of Safety and Loss Prevention,’ and it’s, it’s brilliant. I’m talking for as many people, I love Reddit because it’s just been the best seller or anything, but what, what he’s very good at is making sort of quite cool observations and summarizing them quite neatly. So one of the greatest observations that he made, he was a chemical engineer, was, ‘what you don’t have can’t leak.’ Wow, that’s very, yeah, yeah, I thought so.

