 Russ, you want to talk about how long you and your family have been no-tilling, and kind of how that's helped you build some of that resiliency into your system? Yeah, so Dad started, I think he started no-tilling soybeans in 1980, and then we went to full no-till corn and soybeans in 82, so he's been, some of our ground has been no-tilled for 38 years, so when you're asking the other farmers here, what would you change, what would you, honestly, I don't really have to change much, because our land has been in our no-till system for so long that I don't know what else I can do to make it better. We've had really good luck with what we're doing. Is there some economics that you've kind of tied back to, to your soil health, is there, you know, what are your savings, are you able to maybe reduce some inputs, are you able to prove some of this stuff? Right, so I mean, for me, my biggest pieces of equipment are the planter, a sprayer and a combine, and then the tractor to pull the planter, but other than, you know, I just have a 20-foot disc and a 20-foot field cultivator, so I don't have those extra costs for a big disc, big ripper, big field cultivator, big four-wheel drive to cover all that stuff.