 The National Outstanding Young Farmer Award for Congress that we just attended is put on by the Outstanding Farmer of America fraternity. The award started as a national award in 1951. You go through, you're nominated, you fill out an application, then if you're top 25 you fill out another application, much like the achievement award is for young farmers and ranchers at Farm Bureau. So after you fill out the final application they pick top 10 out of that application and then you go to the awards congress and the first day you go through and you have your 20 minute interview. From that you're top four of the nation for the top four finalists. I mean you had dairymen from Wisconsin, you had potato farmers from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, you had greenhouses in Alabama, cotton in Georgia, you had rice in California and I'm sure I forgot a commodity or a state but it's just the whole organization is so diverse. Like our reaction, like I was stunned that we were actually a finalist for it after being with the other finalists for I think it was three days at that point, like we were together almost every minute of the day getting to know them and then as we got home and actually had time to decompress it's humbling because I think this could be said for the group any one of us is just trying to make our operation the best that it can be. At one thing that was neat, one of the older gentlemen that had been part of the program, he was actually the one that scheduled our flights. He had won in 1970. He was a finalist in 1970. He'd been coming for years and years to it and Mr. Jerry had said at the end they had the forum where what class you were in like people were standing up from classes in the 60s until this year's class. I mean it was just an honor to be chosen as a top four finalist and not only for our operation but for the state. Like Arkansas has been represented in the past but we're not a top contender usually in the organization so I think from now on we're going to try to bring this to the forefront because our young farmers and ranchers are doing the same principles. I mean every one of us are whether but it's specific to their operation whether they're row crop or livestock so it's nothing that I think that's set us apart in the state but because I mean it's common practices but in the nation it's different than what other areas are doing.