 Our family farm here is about 1,000 acres and we've got pecan trees, cattle, and some hay meadows here. And we've got a rice and soybean row crop farm and about 800 head cattle cow-calf operation. And it's me, my dad, his two brothers, and my two brothers. We purchased this property and started in 2018 and planted our first 4,000 pecan trees in 2019. Of course, installed the irrigation here, planted Bermuda grass between the trees. And in 2020 we planted an additional 2,000 trees. We have six different varieties and as you can see this winter, we heavily pruned the trees back to one central leader and we continue to spray them, fertilize them, do irrigation. And over the next couple of years we'll be improving our irrigation for bigger trees as they get bigger. And we also plan to plant about another 20, 30 acres worth of pecan trees here behind this to kind of get to about 6,500 trees. And then after that, I guess we'll wait until year seven or eight when it's time to start harvesting trees and learn from there. Well, we've got some pretty good neighbors here in Conway County with Billy Welchman and Crash Crothers and now Johnny Mouse that got pecan trees and Mr. Foshee that got pecan trees and been successful at it. So we kind of talk with those guys and learn and see what they do and we've also been involved with Oklahoma State University and the Noble Research Institute in Oklahoma. And a lot of those guys are very, you know, the pecan industry is very helpful. Usually you can pick up the phone and call somebody if you've got a question. And just, yeah, the support in the industry has been very helpful. We're about 15 minutes from Pedigee Mountain, which has about 800,000 visitors a year vision the state park. And you know, my wife's an elementary school teacher and we've got two young kids and they like learning about it. And so we've kind of talked about the agritourism aspect of the pecan farm for people come out and enjoy the farm and kind of see what we got going on and let people learn more about agriculture. Definitely the pecan farm is a long term investment. You know, it's seven or eight years until you see your first pecan. And I'm 35, you know, I've got an eight-year-old and a four-year-old. So this is definitely something hopefully that they will keep going. And it is a long term, you know, pecan trees, I don't know when they quit producing, but I know they start about, you know, a year at seven or eight and they go on until probably 40, 50, 60 years. And so, yeah, this is definitely something that we've kind of, you know, this farm, this ground has been kind of the same family for a long time. We're able to purchase it in different tracks and put it back together. And that's what we're hoping to kind of help this back to one farm and, you know, have here for, you know, hopefully a couple generations to enjoy.