 You know, we've got something green growing, maybe not a planted cover crop, but on probably a third of the entire crop land acres right now. So we're moving that way, but we're trying to find and figure out a way which we did by growing our own cover crop seed to expand it out and keep some money in our pocket too. We believe in it, but with that though, you still have business partners, you still have landlords, you still have agronomists, you still have all these other people. And so we had to figure out how to bring those people with us on a journey, because in some instances, the landlords weren't happy to see something green growing out thereafter. It's a complete paradigm shift of how we're gonna handle the land. And if you're not the land owner, then you have to still appease the landlord. And so it really was a blessing that we only had a few acres in the CSP program because that gave us the opportunity to kind of fine tune a little bit the cover crops and it gave the landlords a chance to see big, at least once that then they all of a sudden say, oh, oh, that's not so bad. And some landlords really love to hunt. And when you get big cover crops, where do they go? There's all kinds of wildlife in there. And so then they started to see, okay, this is a win-win for everybody. So just a lot of patience and it was a lot of time and just God's hand that we hit it big one time and they walked out there and there was all kinds of birds and all of a sudden the light bulb went off that this works and some landlords, we never got convinced of it. They couldn't get over that paradigm shift of you need to be out there with tillage equipment or you don't need to be out there at all. They might've come to the no-till part, but they didn't come to the, let's keep it active, let's keep it alive. And just in that piece of ground, it wasn't one that was in CSP. We put it out there because it was one that probably had been a little bit mistreated over the years and JP and I just tried to brainstorm what can we do to try to butter it, even if we can't have it for 25 years. What can we do to just try to make it a little bit better for next year because we knew we had it for the next year. And so we put it out there and they just shook their heads every day and the cover crops didn't get that big, but the next year when we put soybeans on it, it sure made a little bit of difference. Yeah, we left the cover crops out, they didn't graze them off or anything. So it's a paradigm shift that you have to bring your business partners with too.