 If you go back 10 years, we just had a cow-calf operation and sometimes we had cattle in the feedlot even, fed them corn, fatten them. Since Eli came back from college, we've been trying to add more enterprises to, as they call it, stacked systems. So the first thing we added was some sheep and you don't want to add a new enterprise too quickly because there's a real learning curve to something you've never done before. We'd never had sheep and we've learned a lot about how to handle them and we've got 55 years now and we're probably going to get up to a couple hundred in the next five years. And then the newest thing we added in was some hogs and that was a year ago. We'd like to turn those piggies out in a cornfield and let them eat the corn and graze corn so that they wouldn't be in a feedlot either. So about eight, ten years ago is when we thought we should be doing these rotational grazing and splitting up pastures and such. We really wanted to get cattle integrated into our cropland, putting more into the soil. So the soil will give back to us even more. Our goal is to get to the point where we're not feeding any stored feeds over the wintertime. And last year we got, I think probably we fed for 50 days. And last year was a tough winter. We had some snowfall early and then it melted off and we thought that was great, except that made a layer of ice. And then we got some more and it melted and we got an even thicker layer of ice. And so there are some tricks that you can use in this part of the country to be able to keep your cattle out there for a longer and longer time. So we had about 250 acres of cover crop and I would say half of it we win rowed. We hired a guy to come out with his self-propelled disc bind and he win rowed it. And we wish we would have done all of it like that. After the first frost he came out and did that and it actually turned out to be right before the first snow too. We found that the quality kept in that row and the cows were able to find it through the snow. Up to a certain point we actually had to go out there with a loader tractor and show them where it was at one point. But once they found it they went right up the row. But this year we're doing that again but we'd like to bail some of it up and leave the bales out there because then they'd be able to get to everything. The bale grazing is what they call it. So you give them however many bales they need per day and they should be able to get to everything. Even with the corn stocks we want to try to see if we can maybe go out there with our v-rake, get a win row that we can bale up and it'll just be what they want to eat and leave bales out like that because we didn't get anything out of our corn stocks last year because it was all iced over. My grandpa started farming down here in Casswood area. I'd like to keep it going as long as I can. It's getting tough and so you need to be able to do something new, something original. Every year that we try something new and it works it's like, alright we got it all figured out and then I go to a winter conference and somebody tells me something new and it's like, I think we've got to try that.