 Jesslyn, you alluded to this earlier, but I want to revisit this as this whole idea of a backup plan. It was only after you talked about it that it struck me how important that was. Basically, one of the really bad blizzards, I think it was right around New Year's, there before we pulled the couch from the study. Got a terrible blizzard. I actually had driven the tractor to the house that I stay in just to be able to get back over to the research center. I had to follow me out with the tractor. So I went over to the cows and the cows were gone. They were not in any of the bale grazing products that we had set up. They had made their way over to a tiny little bit of brush because a lot of the windbreaks had gotten blown over. The bales were completely covered with snow. The waters were completely covered with snow. The fences were completely covered with snow. A lot of the cows had found a little brush patch about a half mile away in another pasture and that's where we found quite a few of them. The snow was so deep that you couldn't really get through with the tractor. Maybe with a horse, but not easy. So we're on foot for a lot of it, trying to round up these cows after the blizzard had finally settled. It was a wreck. There's definitely some cows that were probably not found. Pretty much all the cows got trailed home to the dry lot or to a closed pasture that we could push up snow and feed hay. So kind of a lesson learned. Basically, if you're going to set up a bale grazing, I always think you either set it up close to home or close to an area that you would generally winter feed or you would have hay stocked up in piles that you can easy get to the tractor and roll and feed if you need to an emergency. Winter water is always an issue up here, but just have a good backup plan for that winter water never freezes and we can always get it open and get snow pushed around it so the cows can get to that water tank. For a lot of producers that are going to first try bale grazing, I definitely would recommend just doing it close to home where it's an easy less than a half-mile trail to home if you have to get them home and feed where you would normally feed. Just in case we get a crazy winter like that again, but you never know what can happen and when your water is frozen, you're not thinking about how you're going to get water out there and if they're four miles from home, it's not like it's an easy little trail home or trailering cows home during the winter. Yeah, so definitely less than learn there. And I know there was quite a few other producers around North Dakota that graze cover crops all winter long and they had to pull cows off of their study or not their study, their cover crop fields and bring them home and feed hay. And yeah, just being aware that it's definitely a realistic thing that can happen that it doesn't work. And then we were kind of in the situation where those bills were then covered all winter long. So the rest of the, I think we had like four or five more moves in our study, probably a little over 500 bills that didn't get fed just sat out there because we would literally had to push snow to get every bail and then try to get them hauled home and. Right, so that wouldn't have made sense, yeah. No, so, but I mean, it was an atypical winner, you know, we definitely don't usually get that terrible winners. Usually it's the opposite anymore where we get pretty mild winners and a lot less snow, so. But less than learned, make sure you have a contingency plan for that.