 We thought it would be really important for us just to include this very, very short segment on sidewall compaction and how covers and small grains have helped Jesse in this situation. As a reminder, sidewall compaction happens when planting occurs in wet soils. The furrow openers can smear soil into the sidewall, compacting it and preventing the roots from growing outwards. With good soil structure, the sidewall is porous and not sealed off, allowing roots to grow in all directions. Yeah, so when you bring a small grain into the rotation and then add another small grain as a cover crop into that, you basically make the soil very mallow and porous and you take away that spent slab effect that you get. And, you know, if you say you're in just a straight corn soybean rotation, you're in a very low carbon environment and they're very, very porous soil structure, even in no-till. And when you go and you try and plant that, you basically make a furrow and it creates the sidewalls on the side and those roots can't penetrate through that and then they just kind of grow straight down and you get a mohawk root. But when you have a small grain in the rotation, those roots can actually penetrate through that sidewall and it isn't as big of an issue and I've done this, I mean I've been digging roots and paying attention to this and I've seen this small grain alleviate that. What put me in a unique position was I would, we would go to these meetings but then we would come back and actually do the experiments and then we would watch these experiments progress as the summer went by. I have to admit I was a little bit of a skeptic at first, but after seeing the difference that this makes, I was just sold on and I brought it home to the farm.