 We're out here at Chirin Farms in Gentry, Arkansas. It is really cold and I'm here to talk to Payton and Paxton Smith. They're going to show me around their farms. So come on, let's go. What's this made out of? Is that actual dirt? Mm-hmm. For some reason in my head, I wanted to, like, see if it was like candy or something like that. Payton, Paxton. Can you show me around? Is this your farm? Yeah. Okay, can you show me around it? It looks incredible. Sure. Okay. Okay, so where are we? At the crop field. Crop field. Then we have the shop site over here where we store all of our machinery. Oh, wow. Do you know what each one of these are? Yeah. Okay, can you tell me what it is? This is a cumulative baler. They just came out with it in John Deere. A hay swather, a combine. Y'all manage the farm. Are you co-managers of the farm? Yeah. Okay, do you have any issues that happen? Like, sometimes when our cousins come over or stuff like that. Our big issues on a farm are they break the fence. Yeah. So we had to repair that. And people are a little just great at this. Oh, do they? Yeah, we had to repair that. People there are literally always messing up those farms. Yeah. All right, where we got over here? The cow farm in the cow part. Mm-hmm. So we have all the cows. There's a person who's talking. Ooh, that's cool. Well, we all got started. I blame Caleb because he needs somebody to play with and finally got to make a farm table like you wanted to. That's why we had kids. But it is really neat to see the real life experiences we have day to day and then kind of see it through their eyes as they show it on the table when they're playing. But on your farm period, you've actually done some of this stuff, right? A lot of it. A lot of it? So like bush hogging? Yeah, we bush hog our fields every once in a while. Yeah. And what else do you do that's on here? Um, hay bale, like the cumulative bale, we don't have that in real life but we got it in farm toy. Oh, that's cool. So we just use that for our bale. And we move the discs. Mm-hmm. Oh, okay. Cool. And these two trucks are going to a sale. Oh, they're going to a sale? Cattle sale, yeah. And you work on this farm every day? Almost every day. Almost every day? Okay. But now I'm kind of a full-time worker on the farm. Oh, you are? What are you doing on the farm? Oh, I am like helping work cattle and all that. Oh, yeah? Because we have an electric squeeze shoot so like there's levers. Mm-hmm. Oh, wow. So, I mean, it's pretty much time for you to get out of the house, get a 401k and figure out life right now, huh? What is a 401k? Well, that's a question we still try to figure out at the age of 31. So, let's check out the rest of the farm. So, we'll push this gate. The gate will go. Uh-huh. Yeah, you don't have to worry about actually getting it through there. They push this and then they squeeze them in. Uh-huh. And then they push some push into there. Okay. And then they go into the shoot and you work them like your tag and band them. Oh, that's really neat. And that's something you'll actually do on the farm. Yeah. Sometimes it's hard to go slow out on the real farm showing the kids because we're just trying to get things done. But here we can really explain stuff and let them be in charge and let them see how stuff works and just kind of teach them from the side. Okay, so you're going to teach me how to do what right now. So, hey. Hey. Okay. Yeah. Okay. So, first you cut. Yeah, it's like a big cutter with attachment on the front. Cool. Then we come with a tractor and a rake. We don't actually have a rake like this. Uh-huh. It's an older style rake. But you rake it and it puts it in the thin rows. Okay. Then once you're done with that, you come in with the baler. The baler sucks it up right there, throws it in here and makes a big round bale like these. Yeah, I think it's really neat to see the things that we've taught them and that they can go on and be a teacher to their classmates, you know, not every kid that comes over to farm kids. So, you know, maybe a friend from school gets a little feel of what life is like on the farm without having to go out in the elements or in a situation that may not be safe, but they can really use it as a tool to teach them about our ranch or about farming. Payton, Paxton, thank you so much for having me and like me help out on the farm. I appreciate it. I hope I get to see you all again soon and I hope to see this in the future. All right? All right, we'll give it a bye. Wave bye. Thumbs up. Bye. Wave thumbs up. Now bye. Now another thumbs up. Now wave again. Sorry. Payton, you did a great job, man. Why is this crazy lady going to leave? I don't know. I don't know.