 Well, there's all these different segments, okay? There's, okay, am I going to switch to no-till? And there's the economics and the risk to that. And then there's a part, well, okay, am I going to, as part of that, am I going to incorporate livestock and produce some forage crops in there and use that as a form of diversity? And it seems like, to a certain extent, when I can add more diversity of that type, I can lower the economic risk, okay? So if I'm going to dedicate some acres to a cover crop, if I've got some livestock or my neighbor has some livestock that we can bring in there and generate some revenue off of it from grazing it, that helps offset the risk of just planting it from a soil health standpoint. So let's spread the risk that way, okay? Residue management. There's about too much residue out there on the corn stalks, okay? And people say, well, I can't have cattle out of my corn stalks. I don't have fence and I don't have water and I don't have cattle, okay? Well, you look around for a neighbor like me, I have fence, I have cattle. If you've got a quarter of corn stalks and we'd like to put my cattle on it, I can use some new tools. I can use polywire and plastic step-in posts and I can put a fence up around that in about two hours. And I use technology like tracks on a four-wheel. So I can go out in the snow and I can move fence and it's no big deal. But it's something you have to plan ahead for. You have to have cattle that are used to electric fence and you have to have a contingency plan, okay? So you've got too much corn residue and I've got cattle and I want to put them out on your cornfield and you've got concerns. You're concerned about compaction and so I address that concern by talking about how we're going to move that string every five days and give those cattle a new section of the field. You've got concerns about what if it warms up and those cattle pug that soil up, okay? That's a real concern. I have to address that with a contingency plan. I have to say to you, okay, if it gets nice I'm going to pull those cattle off of there and I'm going to put them over here and when it gets cold again we'll bring them back. You've got a litany of concerns that are valid concerns that I need to address, okay? But livestock integration is one way to ease out the financial risk. And I've gone to any kind of event that's put on about soil health. What I've seen happen at these events is they'll have a panel. There will be farmers and ranchers sitting on that panel that are saying yes. These folks over here are talking about the weed suppression they view. They've noticed by using certain crops and cover crops and I've done that and it works like that.