 Do you guys have salinity issues? If you do, how are you managing them? Or do you think your neighbors are aware of how to manage them and what causes them? I guess if you don't want to speak to that. We have a few spots scattered throughout the farm that really haven't changed much over the last several years. But we're not wasting any expenses on them. We should be, and some of this is rented grounds, we should contact the landlord and say, hey, we need to do something different, but we're just basically not fertilizing and not planting. Nothing's growing there. Why spend that money on it? Don't put any inputs. Don't put any inputs. It's already high in nutrients. I mean, there's no, yeah, it can be five or six hundred pounds on nitrogen per acre out there, easy. The challenge is, a lot of times guys look at the salinity spot and want to plant something in that spot. But the salinity is originating up on top the hill. That's where if you can get something, a falpha or a grass growing in more of the field, a bigger area, we can stop that salinity or that transfer of nutrients before it gets there. The issues we have is the ground's been farmed a hundred years before us already. So there's a lot of that has gone into those spots and removing that's not just a one or two-year process. A lot of these salinity areas, especially when margins are tight, I mean, the yield is so low. And everybody just, we just keep going over them. We're putting seed on, putting fertility, you know, hopefully not putting very much on fertility, but you put all this money in, you got a way negative margin to pull them down your better producing areas. So I mean, a lot of ours, we probably, a lot of fields, you know, there's ten to twenty percent of the area just, you're in a negative margin all the time. Even if you don't get a lot of return off the perennial grass, at least you're saving all the inputs. And there's so many programs where you can put into CRP and there's, I know the NRCS, they're coming out with new programs all the time to put perennial grass. So really bad ones, I mean, really only to fix them is put it in perennial grass. And then when you get them fixed, if you take it back out, make sure you keep the intensity above them where the salt, the saline's coming from higher. So you got to use more cover crops, try to get your water intensity used higher. And just make sure that when you put that in the cover, make sure you go out past the slender area with the grass. You got to go up, up to side slope of ways in order to fix that problem. I think if you look at it from, yeah, you're not going to get a lot of money out of that grass, but it's going to save you losing hundreds of dollars on inputs by farming it. And it makes sense. I mean, you see people, especially these wetter areas, if there's cattails growing there, just stay out of there. Because all you're going to do, you go in there, I see people in the dry year, they go in, they dis the cattails out. Well, the next year it rains again. Now, but you don't have the cattails using up the water. I mean, you should just left them in the first place, just leave it in the permanent vegetation. We have had some success in those areas that have cattails using stuff like garrison creeping foxtail or low-plattoid canary, something that can tolerate the water and still make a hay out of it. Yeah, and a really wet year you can still lose some of that and not be able to harvest in some cattails come back. But we have had success doing that. And I'll use garrison in the lower areas in the alfalfa and then alfalfa in the rest of the field. So garrison or western wheat combinations in the lowest help the soil that's their salinity. But the other part is the alfalfa using that before it gets there. Like you're saying, we've got to intercept that water and salt and, well, actually, nutrients. It's not salt, it's peke, potassium. It's all our nutrients, the good stuff that's in those areas. We need to utilize that fire higher up the profile.