 in central Ohio in Fairfield County and also operate Walnut Creek Seeds cover crop business. The use of cover crops in our cropping system mainly with corn and beans has been real helpful in reducing input costs primarily with applied fertilizer and with herbicide. In the cornfield behind me we have where I planted a multi-species cover crop after a wheat crop last year and so this year because of the legumes that were in there we were able to reduce fertilizer usage about 30 to 40 percent and as well reduced herbicide to only a single pre-emerge pass. So no post-emergence herbicide was applied because the residue suppressed any weeds in the season. So we see continued success in our farm operation in reducing these operational costs of excess fertilizer and additional herbicide usage through the reduction in weeds and the natural benefit of fertilizer through the legumes that we use in the multi-species mix. We've had good success planting into cover crops here on our farm for several years and see the benefits in soil health and crop resiliency based on that. An area that can be real helpful to farmers is education in that especially in how the resiliency works to build the health in their farm and in their soil systems. So it's one thing that I can encourage SARE and Extension and others that work with farmers in the field is to continue to talk about how to use cover crops in your operation.