 Behind me here, you can see some of the devastation of the flooding that we've had in Drew Counties, Lincoln Counties, and Deshae County hit probably the hardest. We've had, at one point, we had about 19.2 inches of rain in just over a few hours, and so anytime you have that much water in one place, you're going to have a lot of devastation. And so one of the things that I've been doing is communicating with folks on the ground in all of those counties, in all of my counties, and communicating with our farmers who've been directly impacted hundreds of thousands of acres underwater, which is a significant loss in crop loss. So we can't miss that, that significant of impact. We're seeing a lot of that water lately. The guys north of me were affected worse in the Roar, Dumas, Tiller area, but now all that water's coming down south, and what we had just a couple of days was just a few hundred acres, and now we got several thousand acres that look just like a lake. I mean, there's no high ground. Currently, we're out at Highway 1 at 43 Canal trying to patch a levee. At 43 Canal comes out of the bank. We can see another five foot of water. No telling how many thousand acres that were put under, and the county's out there doing that now, so it's pretty serious down here. Tuesday, I guess it started around four, four o'clock in the morning, and we got like 19 inches of rain by three o'clock that afternoon, somewhere in there, but I guess the official estimate was 19 inches, and by that afternoon, the water was already backing out of the creeks, and the boughs were rising. I got one pump that's probably 20 feet underwater. We couldn't even get to it in time. We just hope it gets out here as fast as we can when we can replant and hopefully salvage something out of this year.