 our conveyor concepts. We've got a third person involved, my cousin Chuck Dietrich, so that's the DB and R. But initially we applied for the SARA grant when we first started going to the Nomadic Harvester system. We were looking for any shot in the arm funding we could get. That funding really helped initially get an idea on the, if the Nomadic system would work and what we started with, it gave us a jumping point, you know, to get the concept there and prove that we could convey fruit from the tree into the box and do it in a fresh manner, you know. So that's where the SARA grant was so important I would say. It was very timely kind of when we were spawning this idea and the concept and from there we've been fortunate to work with others in the industry and another grant and build on that like we said into the fourth generation from where we were at the time of the SARA grant. Without the grant it probably be years down the road yet to be where we're at today. It can be used year-round. It's used for pruning, trellising, then on into hand thinning and then for harvesting. So actually you'd be able to use a machine 12 months of the year which would make the payback way better than most equipment out there today that's just used for harvest like combines and that that only used a month of the year. This thing would be a year-round thing. We've got two of these out, one in Washington state and one here that we're going to run last year. We weren't able to run here because of lack of crop so we took it to Pennsylvania. We ran the one that is in Washington. We ran that one in California and did peaches and then also Northern California did pears and then back up in the Annapolis and Washington so we could get as much time and as much different variety of fruit and that because the vacuum system could be used for any round fruit as far as like tomatoes or you know any any fruit or vegetable that's fairly round could be transferred through it. So it's not just tied to tree fruit. It could be used for basically any type of fruit or vegetable that would go through it. It takes in everything up to about a four and a half inch diameter so I mean you could put almost anything that is going through it and be able to utilize it in not just the fruit industry but in the vegetable and a lot of other things so I think the potential as far as using it for a lot of the fruit to reduce labor has really got a huge potential. Once you get a crew that's on it day in and day out and then also be able to run it at night I think we can we can really reduce our labor costs as far as picking and then we're going to follow the fruit right on through to the package shed and check for the bruising in that and make sure we've got everything right in line and if that all goes good we'll be ready for market. We follow the fruit you know you just put it in and it seeks the two and then you'll see it come out. Tration in it that we that's the one thing we got to keep an eye on because if you plug the filtration you decrease your vacuum so like we get into late fall when you get some hard freezing get a lot of leaves and litter we'll pull it out of there so it won't be going in the box and another plus says the apple gets a real sheen out of going through that two second ride it's like it's buffed when it comes out of there. We've harvested peaches apples I know it'll handle about a round firm fruit or vegetable it's got an application. As a grower I think I would pick my ladder production with one machine then I take the liability out of it I take the ladder work out of it and where you quality control usually takes a dive is when you you get a lot of bruising when you're up in the ladder you can usually get as a grower you can get your fruit picked any way you want from the ground but usually you start seeding the box from ladders and you knock fruit off set the ladders. It's absolutely necessary because the biggest scare even this year now is labor I mean we've got a huge crop all it here everybody's gonna be fighting over the labor and trying to get them away from the other person and if we can reduce our labor even by 15-20 percent is just huge. I think we're structured to have the biggest crop just because of the size and all those plantings that were 0809 are peaking now or they're you know getting their potential so yield wise because that big size and that volume where I would think personally we'd have the biggest crop we've had this year. Initially our thoughts were utilize the growers tractor which they own and supply it but the length and a lot of growers are in the mindset now they want something self-propelled so that's probably the next step is to see where that goes and marry the harvester to that as a modular unit that can be plugged off and on like this is.