 What are we going to do, Lee? I suspect the conclusion is we're not going to drum seat. This is the depth of our mud. So as such, the wheels of the drum seater sink too far into the mud, and hence the metering units sit on the mud and fail to function as metering units. Now, an engineer could approach this and say if we can find larger diameter wheels, light wheels, it could still work. But we need to see today that's non-negotiable. So we're going to move on to a simpler technology. Because we're too lazy to do manual drum planting and we don't have seedlings anyway, so all we can do is broadcast the seed, but we try to do this as good as we can do. See, our biggest problem here is not that the drum seater is a bad machine. It will work fine on a soil which isn't as deep as the one that we've got here. It's what we call a Mars clay. It is very, very rich in clay. It has about 80% clay content and it's very soft because of the water and the volcanic origin it has. So even after we would wait more days, it wouldn't settle easily down. So I think the main conclusion that we can draw is that a drum seater like this is not suitable for this kind of heavy and deep and soft soil. Otherwise, it probably would work, but we'll have to find this out some other day. A few meters out ahead once you can. Just a little bit like this. You want to do like that? Yeah. See? On your next run I want you to get your rate about right, and for the next run I want you to sew them all the right way up. The right way up. I want you to land them with the chute facing up. Okay. Okay Lee, on a scale of 1 to 10, what do you think we've accomplished in terms of spreading our seed uniformity? I think when we started the field we were barely five, but overall I think I'd give us a 7 or an 8. The uniformity is quite good. We're aiming for a plant density of 150 plants a square meter and there's plenty of seeds in the field, spread uniformly to achieve just that. We can lose a few seeds and we'll still be fine. I had a lot of trouble initially. I was I think looking too much on the ground, trying to sprinkle seed in little patches, but later I think I got the swing, like the broad swing, looking straight ahead, walking and throwing. I'm quite hopeful that I improved over time, but we'll see in a week I guess what emerges. Well I hope we've got some before and after foot inch to prove just what you've said. Yes. Is there anything else that we need to do next? There'll be an application of buta-core, a pre-emergent herbicide applied on Monday by our trained applicators. We're not entitled to use those products ourselves. So that should get us our weed-free status and the establishment density we want and we'll come back and assist that next week. Yeah, one thing that we've also done just after we were done with throwing is actually two things. One is we've dug a few little canals here and there to drain off the standing water and that was still quite deep in some patches and could negatively affect the emergence. Then we've spread some seed on the side that was left over just as a reserve. So we'll have a little seed bed there and if it turns out that we have empty patches and we need to do some replanting there at least we have some seedlings for that. Okay, next week we'll see...