 Cover crops is an interesting story. We had a professor friend who needed a place to do some research, and she asked if we had a field that we would, you know, let her put some cover crops in and so forth. And my dad had had some negative experiences with cover crops back in the 80s, and so we weren't terribly interested in cover crops. We agreed to do it, you know, for her, because she helped us on some other fronts. So we started to seed annual ryegrass. Didn't really pay that close of attention until it was the first week in April, and the ryegrass that year was probably eight inches tall, maybe a little bigger. And I was out fixing a tile hole, and I dug a hole down to get to the tile to fix the hole, and as I was down in the trench, I could see roots down at four feet deep. And that was kind of the aha moment. I know that if we add up the benefits, if we look at where we've improved, one of the first farmers we've bought, we've doubled the organic, where we've gone from 2% to 4%. That 2% organic matter gives us 60 more units of any year. At current market rates of nitrogen values, that's a 50 cents a year, that's $30 an acre per year. That same 2% of organic matter is capable of holding about 16,000 gallons of water per percentage, so 32,000 gallons of water. And that's only in the top 12 inches. We hope we're creating this phenomenon even deeper in the soil, but all these numbers I'm talking about are just in the top 12 inches. So they could be higher. But, you know, that's equivalent to an inch and a quarter rainfall event that we get in August after it quits raining and our neighbor doesn't. Our cover crop plan, or the reason why we want a cover crop is a long-term viewpoint that the sun is our free resource, and that anytime we have sunshine, we want something green and growing and putting carbon into the soil, back into the soil. We try to rebuild our organic matter back to what it once was. If I can retire someday or look out across the farm and see that we've returned a soil organic matter to close to equilibrium for this area, I'd be thrilled to death.