 Northern Tripp County is an extremely diverse area with respect to grassland and farmable acres. We're blessed to have extremely good grasslands intertwined with acres that can easily be farmed. And so it's our family's goal to study and understand the native grasslands and try to get all of our farm acres back to its most native state. Bryan is always out digging up soil in in the native grassland to try to understand that ecosystem to get our crop ground back to its most native state. The native grasslands teach us all about soil health. They teach us all about rotational grazing. If you just look and understand the land and what it can and cannot do that is how we manage our cattle. Bryan has implemented grazing cover crop behind all of the wheat acres and to give you specifics we had almost 800 bowls grazing cover crop last fall. So $1.53 per head per day is what we saved for having animals out on the land grazing cover crop versus in a feed yard. When you talk about that many animals that's a huge savings. And so that's a direct economic impact of one of the things that we've implemented that does several things. It increases soil health, it's more productive and it's excellent for the cattle. Trying to get our farm land back to its most native state would be the overall objective. Knowing that we are doing the right thing it gets me excited about the next generation and that's what keeps me going every day.