 We farm, you know, anywhere between 15 and 17,000 acres. Corn, cotton, soybeans, Milo, ever so often and stuff. But depending on price, you know, commodity prices, and we're able to plant what we want to, where we want to. We don't have landlords, you know, dictating what we plant and that kind of stuff. So that makes it easier to farm around and rotate crops and stuff. And we grew up working. We were running a spray rig at an early age and I can remember being on the highboy and I was driving the highboy, what, nine? You had to stretch out like that to push on the clutch. And I'm up on the front of it trying to spray with stuff. They were spot spraying Johnson grass. And he's up there trying to ride it. We had a couple of arguments out there about it. It was all fun. I mean, it's always some kind of challenge and it's been that way with my dad, I remember him saying, we got a picker. I couldn't even get a picker the first year. Finally got a picker right there at the end and that was in 1973 or four or whatever year it was. I mean, you're still fighting the same thing today. There's always something that's a challenge out there. Of course, maybe I make a mountain out of Mohio on challenges, but it just gripes me to have so many challenges that it seems like, but it keeps me getting up every day. You grow more appreciative of what he was able to do for you as a kid, seeing the hours he works, how hard he works, how passionate about it. Because he's doing it for his family and that's what it just, it means the world. My dad come pick me up all the time. We'd go ride and help him irrigate when I was little or they could be picking cotton just right across the road. And then I kind of always worked on the farm. He was a lot better at sports than I was and so I did a lot of working on the farm and I've always done it forever, every summer. I'd come back from spring break in college and I'd come back and I'd go to work and just something I've always done, I've always wanted to do. Never thought of doing anything else but farming. Just all they've ever done. It wasn't like us. They didn't start when they were five and six years old. Things are just different. But they've been working out here when we needed them, you know, long time. I can't tell you how long, I've actually started working as far as just getting pickups moved and driving a grain cart here and stuff like that. And it's great having them here. Very refreshing to see their faces in the morning when you come to work and stuff. Because they're happy to be here. Yes. I was on the combine of the day and Dusty was on the other combine and the two boys were driving trucks and stuff and I was like, hey, this is pretty nice. It's cool to know that, hey, my grandpa bought this farm in the 70s and basically rebuilt that house. Then my dad and uncle grew up in the house and then now I'm raising my own son in the house. It's cool. So I guess once it's in your blood, it's kind of always in your blood.