 I'm Adam Sessions with Sessions Farm, family operated farm, and we're at Sessions Farm Market in Granville, Alabama. We're a third generation farm. We farm about 2,500 acres total. We do road crops, cotton and peanuts, about 1,000 acres of that. We run about 300 head of mama cows. We do vegetables during the summer, watermelons, tomatoes, cantaloupe, corn, just about anything we can sell at our local farmers markets. We also do satsumas and pecans during the fall, which do very good for us. Our operation, we try to retail as much product as possible. We have three roadside stands. We have the one here on Granville Wilmer Road. We also do during certain weeks of the summer and fall, we have local farmers markets in Mobile with the farmers market authority. We also wholesale as well with our citrus. We sell a good bit to the school systems and we sell to different box stores and wholesalers around the southeast. We employ, we have about 16 full-time employees and also seasonal harvest contract harvesters that come in during the busy times. During harvest seasons, we work seven days a week, other than that, we're six days here at our retail locations, 730-6. Here we get our fertilizers and chemicals and seed from different vendors in the area. There's AFC, Nutrien, Helena, Bratola Farms in Ballin County, Cavly Seed Company, Mobile Nurseries in Georgia. We buy some plants from them. There's several options. We don't put all our eggs in one basket. We shop around to different local folks. Yeah, all of our packaging from unboxing our product, washing, stuff like that is all done in our new building here. We built a big warehouse and it's behind our retail shop here at our store on Granby Wilmer Road. This is our sat-symmetries and as you can see behind us, some of our orchards were inter-planted with pecan trees and it helps during the winter with the cold weather. It just doesn't get quite as cold and it's just something we incorporate and also this orchard is spaced wide with pecan trees and you can generate a little more money per acre by having citrus and pecans inter-planted. Our pecan orchard here is 75 by 60 and something we've learned over the years when we are planting new orchards. This is one of our older ones but the more room the ponds have, the air flows a little better and it just seems like we don't get as much of the disease because this area is awful. All the rain we get in our area and the high moisture disease can be very tough on us. All right, we're in our little ochre patch and you see it's about to play out but there's still a little bit we've been picking but as we work up the plant will prune the leaves off, it just helps the air flow and pushes the fruit to the top of the plant. All of our vegetable crops as you can see here is all on plastic mulch with drip tape underneath that we use for watering or fertilizing whatever we need to do. We can our plants look sickly, we can fertilize through chemigation and give them a boost or just keep everything watered. We also grow peaches, we've grown 40 kings as a variety. We do all of our pruning ourselves, we'll come in and we prune out the centers, we try to make it look like a upside down umbrella and then we'll pet the tops as well later in the season and we do all the fertilizing and one of the biggest things we have trouble with, we have to watch forward, we have to be sure to spray the trunk to the sick sides for the tree bores. All right, this is our grater, this is a washing vat right here, we'll have a cleaning solution in there, we use it mainly for citrus but we also use it for bell pepper and cucumbers, things like that that need to be washed. But you wash the fruit and it comes up the conveyor and there's also another water here to rinse off the soap solution and then it comes through and this is a used food grade wax to help preserve the life of the fruit and then it comes out this end where you pack but for citrus there'll be three more sizes so you size it as you go and then you box it and weigh them and put them in the cooler. So we use extension for several different things throughout the year, we'll use it online looking at different things like spray applications or things that they recommend and also we work with the local agents discussing different things as we need it, they're very helpful. Advice I would give the beginning farmer will be it takes a lot of hard work and also don't be scared to ask for help or advice because from different farmers as well because what works on our farm for us may not work for you but so you can implement different things from different farmers that may work for your operation.