 Farm in Mississippi County, a little town called Joyner, Arkansas. I'm a third generation farmer and I farm with my wife Sherry, my son, Rhian. We've got the corn and the rice out. Both of them were pretty good yields. We've got our cotton picked. We're actually going to start ginning on it today. Had pretty good cotton yields. Our prices were up quite a bit from what they've been being. Everything has turned out really well. We're down to, like I said, 250 acres of soybeans. We're down to some of our dryland fields that aren't turned out quite as well as we had hoped, but it's still pretty well. We had, fourth of July, we had probably the prettiest crop we've ever had. The rains were coming pretty regular. We had clean fields and then the rain stopped and it turned off hot and dry and even our irrigated fields, we couldn't keep up. They suffered a little bit, but everything's been going pretty good this year. We've had a pretty smooth harvest. The only problem we've had is parts. When we do have a breakdown, we're having to drive miles to get parts. We had a breakdown yesterday afternoon just to burst the hydraulic hose and normally that's just a quick fix run to our local parts store, but nobody's got the parts to fix the hydraulic hoses, so we had to splice it just to get by. From what I understand, all of our parts that come from overseas are sitting in container ships out in the Gulf or out in California and they can't get everybody to unload these ships. I don't know, it's a truck driver shortage, a crane operated shortage, and so we can't get parts. The local John Deere dealership here can tell us where the closest one is. I've actually driven to Stuttgart to get parts. I've driven to Elaine to get parts, been to Wiener a couple of times to get parts. We're talking two and three hour drives to get parts that normally our local dealership has. Still overall our yield is going to be up from normal and prices up, everything was good. The bad thing about it is we're already driven next year because we know input cost is going to be fertilized is out of the roof. We rode up a field this morning that normally we would rotate to rice, but because fertilized costs we're going to put it back in beans next year.