 My name is J.D. Booker, and I'm the owner of the Booker Farm, served in the Vietnam War as the United States Marine. I'm a combat veteran, and I have PTSD. And in California, they told us how to manage PTSD, and then farming is a therapy. Then I retired and came back to Alabama to my home. And that's why I started farming, vegetable farming, therapeutic farming. It was a mountain of works, and so I needed help. Well, I discovered the Alabama Extension pertaining to the advertisement, so that's when I reached out to Alabama A&M. I was asking questions about the community pertaining to farming and how to get assistance and fertilizing, soil testing. So it was very, very helpful because I knew how to farm, but I didn't have no sense of conservation. And so I called on the Alabama Extension for that also because the soil was eroding. Then I did one little plot of vegetables, and then the neighborhood was looking at the farm. That's when I started really raising vegetables because the community had a need. So I started planning and doing workshops for veterans with PTSD, therapeutic farming. Well, you know, we was meeting the needs of the community, meeting the needs of the veterans. So it worked out really well. But Alabama A&M helped me with workshops and helped me do vegetables and planting. But once we started working with the community and then with the veterans, this helped me to really trust and relax a little bit more and communicate more. It just really opened up a whole new world to me. Alabama Extension is there to help people that need to know the basic thing that they don't understand. They can learn how to solve problems. They will definitely be able to help you.