 Well, welcome to the Kansas State University John C. Perry Horticultural Center, beautiful 120 acres just outside of Haysville, Kansas, which is a little south of Wichita, Kansas. And we are a research and extension facility for the Department of Horticulture and Natural Resources at Kansas State University. And one of the unique things that we do here is we grow certified organic sweet potatoes and sweet potato slips. We do this in an effort to promote sweet potatoes as a really viable crop for Kansas. You've got the right soils, Kansas is a perfect climate for our growing sweet potatoes. So we produce our sweet potato slips. We ship those across the country. We grow our own sweet potatoes to provide our own slips for the following year. And we have enjoyed the support of the North Central Cere Grant, which we have been investigating post-harvest handling of slips to see how long we can improve the shelf life of these slips. And we've also been looking at the potential for growing slips in high tunnels. If a grower has some extra space in high tunnels, how efficient is it to use that space to produce sweet potato slips? What is the quality of those slips? And what is the shelf life of those slips? Those are the questions we're sort of trying to answer with our North Central Cere Grant. Howly Nutritious Crop, like I said, it's Kansas' beautiful place to grow it, and any place that's got nice sandy soils and nice warm summers like we're having this year. And a sweet potato slip is nothing more, in the spring we put a sweet potato on the ground that we have stored. We cover them with soil and like you would expect us to do, they send up shoots. Those shoots get 8 to 10 inches tall. We cut them off and ship those out. And that shoot that we cut off that's 8 to 10 inches tall, that is a slip. So sweet potatoes could have a very bright future here in Kansas, especially as far as sustainability goes. It's a different sort of crop. It's a root crop. It's not a leaf crop that's harvested. It fits well into a rotation. There are potentials for larger agronomic growers using them. In fact, this year we have worked with one of the large center pivot growers who is looking at growing sweet potatoes in the corners of his field where the center pivot doesn't grow. And so it's a nice option. It's a nice crop, again, to sort of fit into a low maintenance operation. So we've had really good success with our organic production of sweet potato slips. Remarkably good success. These are our biggest problem, but we manage them through cultivation and some good old manual labor. But some of the common issues associated with sweet potatoes, such as wireworms and scurfs, which is a pretty devastating disease for sweet potatoes, we have had no issues with those in the last 10 years at all. We believe our crop rotation field only gets sweet potatoes every third year, and in between there we've got cover crops. So we think we are beating back those very common sweet potato pests through crop rotation. It's been very successful for us. We are hoping through our operations here to demonstrate, we're hoping not only to demonstrate that sweet potato is a fantastic crop for the area, but we're also, with our slip production, we're actually trying to provide the industry with the necessary tools that they need to do that. Not only are we doing it by demonstration, but we're also committed to supplying certified growers with certified slips so they can get their feet wet with sweet potato production.