 A sprinkler spraying water on plants at a nursery. I thought we could walk up this road, is that okay? Owning a wholesale plant nursery during a drought presents some unwelcome challenges. Our greatest fear was that there would be no water allowed for irrigating outdoor landscapes. The fear that water restrictions would trickle down from homeowners through his retail nursery customers and right to his business's bottom line. That meant John Neeta himself had to respond to the drought at his high ranch nursery in Loomis. And that has changed our growing pallet to grow more drought-tolerant and native plants to offer to public. And that's exactly what John is recommending homeowners do to be part of the overall water-saving effort across California. A sprinkler spraying water on plants at a nursery. At the Crate Myrtle, this is a variety called Twilight Purple. Once it is established, it can survive with very little water. Infrequent water once every two weeks. When you do water, like on a drip system, which is really excellent. This is one that's a real prominent California native. It's the Western Redbud. It's green, leafy, brown leaves throughout the summer. But once this is established, probably it could survive through the summer without any water. This is a dwarf olive. It could probably survive on, I would think, maybe once a month watering. That of course means less water and more savings. And John says if you as a homeowner don't need a lawn, don't plant one. Or get rid of the one you have in favor of a more drought-friendly landscape. It's beautiful, it's the right thing to do, and it's your part of the entire effort to save California's precious water. So we're growing a lot of those plants and trying to push that or educate our customers, our retail nurseries, to offer those to their customers. It's been a really good program.