 So we went to Ross Hansen's place first and he's been no-tailing since the 90s or before on most of his ground and he does some custom planting, also no-tail planting for some of his neighbors. This is the field of Ross Hansen's and he was planting this field his particular day. So there's, you can see the heavy residue on the soil from last year, obviously a corn crop. Ross was planting into there really with relative ease. There was good soil structure that was involved and he wasn't having any issues with planting. Obviously he wasn't having any issues with really any low spots or wet spots that he couldn't get through. There was pretty good soil moisture conditions out there but because of the structure that's been built on that field, soil health practices throughout the years. He was having a good day planting. In fact, he planted this whole field while we were kind of doing our shoot and he had to move on to another field. So he was really good planting conditions and you can see right there in this shot there's a lot of residue out there. It was really, really quite thick, which is good. It's good ground cover, it's protecting from erosion. You know, talking with Ross on this field it's actually pretty a sloped field. It's got pretty high percentage of slopes on there and you can see he's kind of going down one of those slopes here. It may not show up that well from an overhead shot but this would be one of those fields if it didn't have good ground cover and we get those heavy spring rains and you would definitely have a erosion out there but based off the good soil structure out there we should be fine.