 Ryan Larson from Geerts in South Dakota. I started farming in 2013, the year I graduated college with zero equipment and pretty minimal money and I farmed conventionally for five years and then kind of started no-till on some beans and just a little bit of cover crop and then last year I went a hundred percent no-till and I started interceding into corn and planting winter wheat and oats and peas and things like that and I have a cow-calf operation and I graze cover crops as much as I can and rotationally graze pastures and things like that. You want to talk about why you think you can make those small grains small grains work a little bit if you have livestock? It just gives you the opportunity to plant a cover crop you know hopefully by the beginning August and you can really get a lot of grazing out of that save a lot of hay if you can at least break even on the crop then you make your money grazing. So it's you know you're looking maybe break even or make a little money on the small grains and then you can really basically add value on top of that because you're able to add another crop which is your forage you're grazing your cover crop and then you can also make some money on the back end with the beef yeah and then even in the subsequent years I mean the next year the maestero control is way better after small grain and a cover crop almost not even there and I grow conventional beans so just the overall weed control after that is night and day difference from not having a small grain so