that's the pneumonic. today we're doing distillations. and this is one of our five copper stills. they orient themselves from my right to my left in order of size. the smallest one of the stills is about 62 gallons and the largest one is about 95 gallons. this is just the very top of the rather large semispherical top and then a conical shape still. the still itself is probably that big. it's probably 4 feet across inside. and then it runs all the way down to about here. for the base. so it's -- this is a 95 gallons in here, the size of the bathtub in volume. i've been coming here now for nine or ten years. and one of the things that i was just fascinated with is that the level of detail that the archaeologists went to in uncovering the site. and for me it was really fun because i'm not an archaeologist, i'm a chemical engineer and i make whiskey for a living. but it was fun because uneducated me could look at the site and say, obviously the boiler went here, the fire boxes for the still went here, this was the mass floor. the site laid itself out very nicely for us. and a tremend