 Today we're down here in South Arkansas on a logging job. It's a first thinning, one of the crews out is doing a first thinning as you can tell. It's a little damp and this time of year weather has a big issue with everything. We had about 14 inches of snow about two weeks ago, so ground is hard to find and right now our crews are looking for good ground and maybe a lot of first thinning going on instead of log stands. But here on this job we're doing a first thinning trying to get it into chipping saw and to small logs and trying to increase the growth on our stand in September. This time of year is very very hard to find, but of course with hundreds of thousands of acres we are able to find it and to keep our logging crews busy and keep our meals functioning and keeping the employment with the meals going and that's all very crucial for the forest industry. Now our log meals they've increased their prices quite a bit and each meal is competing against each other right now so that has really drove the price of the timber up some. Now we have record prices in lumber we had in November now they're still very high very you can look it's $1,000 a thousand it's very high and it really has it translated back down to the land owner until the last month. In the last month we've seen an increase in stumpage prices for private landowners and for our industrial landowners. Now the biggest thing and it's in our legislator today is our business school forestry at UAM that we're trying to get that funded. They've okayed I think the the concept of it but we need funding for it and that funding is very crucial. We are third or fourth largest producer in the in the south on pine lumber or pine trees but we are badly and I'm talking about tremendously at a disadvantage because the other states so they have a business school they have economists and different ones working on getting in all the data that these people that own the mills are building the mills they call today they want to know how many tons excess tons we're growing where we're growing 20 million excess tons a year right now. So we could cut 25 to 30 million tons right now a year which creates economic benefits for the for the landowners it creates economic benefit for your industry you can have more loggers but we need to get this funded where we can get a business school and we can have all this data on hand when that when that mill comes in says I need this data we need to be able to hand it to them and and get new industry in without new industry we're going to be suppressed and we got to get mills in and it's an economic and GDP boost for the state the more mills we have come in is better for the state more more employment more loggers more everything and the GDP would increase tremendously on on having more industry in it's supplying demand