 April 14th. It was a day where we had 40 to 50 mile an hour winds and it was constant. It was an all-day wind. It was just relentless. And when I went back on the 19th of April, the soil surface did not look normal to me. That field that had blown so bad was now covered with small little rocks. It shouldn't look like this, but what that tells you is that all the soil has blown away. And the only thing left was the heavier material, the stuff that really can't blow away is the small little pebbles out there. And I took pictures of that, top pictures and some side pictures, and now the pebbles are protecting the rest of the soil. That becomes the armor of the ground, if you want to think about it, is the rock that's left. I did have our state agronomist, Marsha Denike, and our state soil scientist, Nathan Jones, also come down to this field. They estimate that on those slight rises, up to two inches had disappeared during the storm, just by the rock that's left in those areas.