 I got a letter in the mail and I'm not real sure why I got it, but it was from a company called Puris and They were the letter basically explained that they have a crop. They're wanting to grow and it was yellow peas Kind of reading the letter you could do the you could you could farm this crop and use your normal combine Well, we've tried peanuts before and I think peanuts are great, but you got to have a separate combine It's a complete separate Way of farming it's the same until it comes to harvest and you can't take a well We take our you know one combine I go over three or four five thousand acres You know a peanut combine would do 300 so You know that was that was fun and and I'm not sure that we're Through doing that or not, but when this yellow peat when this letter come out on these yellow peas We're always looking for something different to grow to be more diversified If of course if it'll make any money and also a cover crop piece So the the letter said if you're interested, please contact us. So I did that they get represented for the company come down We said I'll start talking about it It's they basically take that yellow pea and and use it as a protein isolate and are able to put that in different Nutritional value foods the guy came down. We started looking at it. There's different ways you can grow them You can grow them all season long But when he when he came up with the idea that you know, you can plant them in November and harvest them in March I'm like, well, that's a perfect cover crop, you know, it's it's good for the environment You know through the cover crop ways to through production of food and also allows us to do more with less So looking at it in a in a nutshell, there was a lot of different advantages from it Don't know a lot about it It's a legume. So it's gonna it's gonna raise a lot like soybeans But yet it's gonna be in the winter. So, you know, there is some You know some dangers there if we get a really late Can't the same with wheat, you know, if we get a really late freeze when the wheat's, you know And it's reproductive stage or or, you know milk stage or whatever We'll buy that same dangers with with the peas, but we have that same danger in any crop We grow actually, you know, we're always looking for the next step If there's something we can do different I don't have anybody to go talk to in my area because this will be the first time it's ever been done There is some close, you know, I think there's some across the river, Mississippi. There's some in northeast Arkansas So we're just gonna we're gonna take 250 acres and and plant yellow peas and and see how it comes out You know worst thing worst thing we can do is the worst risk there is the cost of the seed And if it fails and you know, basically we're gonna spend some type of money on a cover crop anyway You know might not be quite the cost of the pea seed But you know the the loss the loss the risk there for the reward is a lot more reward seems like than it is risk So we we're trying it