 Could you guys just talk on some of the management decisions you have to make when you're selecting your cover crops? Well, it depends too on what time you're going to plant them, like even last year with the prevent plant. You know, I knew like if I could plant them early I wasn't going to put like any kind of small grain or cereal right in because I didn't want them going to seed so I started off and it depends what you're going to plant and if you're planting soybeans into it you can go ahead and plant something that's got a high carbon nitrogen ratio like sedan and have some millet and stuff in there in the mix early whereas you're going to go corn or wheat probably more broadly something to build nitrogen and then later I mean like what I did when I got when I started getting later like August and I started putting like oats and barley in there because I and then when I got real late I went to the cereal rye and when are we yeah you just got you got to have an idea of what you want to accomplish I mean you can't it's the more species the better but in general what we've done is is is basically like we like the smaller seeded stuff because it's less expensive so but if you want to shoot for compaction or nitrogen adding species or you know there's a whole range of traits that these cover crops have and you just need to have a plan of attack of what you want happen on your on your fields I know with my job I work with so many different producers over such a wide variety of counties I did see some I was looking at mixes with producers and we'd identify some some things out there where they they maybe wanted one species and ended up with a different one maybe they weren't exactly sure what species they wanted and the ones that come to mind right away is the the confusion or the mixing up of annual rye grass and cereal rye so I just encourage producers to do their homework do their research and make sure they know what species they want and then follow that through make sure that's the one in their mix there's so many different clover options out there there's lots of different clovers the millets last year was another one that was there's a lot of different millets that they can choose to just make sure they do their homework and and have the correct one that they intend in their mix and if they need to terminate at a certain time how to terminate them properly that's definitely important right because annual rye grass versus cereal rye you're gonna have a different recipe there different planned for termination it's most of the time the annual rye grass will winter kill but it doesn't then what's the plan and with that we usually look at whether we're gonna graze it or not where we're grazing it yeah we'll get more oats in if we're going after small grain a lot of times we'll put in an oats radish field pea mix but other costs of the thing too we try to keep it under $20 an acre some of these mixes can be 30 40 bucks an acre and I can't pencil the return on it so we look at it if we're gonna graze it or not how much residue we want left there for the next year what crop we're gonna plant and sometimes it's what's in the bin or what's cheap we make a mix up according to cost