 You guys have extreme events. You showed me a picture of wind damage. What extreme events do you see here and how do you in your operation account for that over time? As I keep going with my no-till and the cover crops, I think that's kind of leveling the playing field a little bit. It's more even throughout the years at waters taking into the soil. I like that a little bit better as compared to before I think it did probably run off a little more or we would have to maybe do some tiling or something like that to manage the water that way. It's just a different way to manage the water I think and plus we talking about wind that we don't have the wind erosion of the soil either throughout the winter time. There's more residue on the soil and then even for the spring runoff it's there and we just save our top soil that way. Talk to us about 2017. I know you started off really promising nice and wet spring and then suddenly you stopped having rain until August. What was the process and how is it looking now? Well it was good planting conditions this spring and late April, May. Then about mid-June or so it kind of started tapering off. I keep track of rainfall for the weather service and we're still about four or five inches below normal for the year but what crops we started harvesting already looks like a very successful year even so. Even despite well now that's the second time I've heard this that today so despite the fact that you didn't have much rain in the middle of the season you're looking at a decent crop this year. Yes even the oats crop for finishing up in the fruit producing time of finishing oats there still had a record oats crop of about 130 bushel acres. So what do you attribute that to? Timeliness of rain is a good part of it but hopefully some of my management practices are taking hold. Since about 1980's look back at some of the soil tests and just about doubled the organic matter level and some of my soils so I think we're on the right path to build that organic matter.