 So maybe we should actually look at some soils, what do you think? I like the idea, I like the idea Let's see what we have Well, I don't know what kind of jumps out at me is a really nice structure, but there's uh, there's really some soil life here What do you think? I think so. Yeah, you know earthworm Beautiful. Yeah, look at that So we've got uh, I can count three individuals right there. Yeah, see there. Yeah four and then plenty Plenty of soil structure It's really nice macro pores. Yeah. Yeah, and then you know, we underestimate that that duff layer You see that that on the top. It's just it's just so important. Yeah, they have that So that's your soil armor you bet and that then also Keeps the temperatures a little bit warmer in the winter. Is that right? Absolutely. Yeah Well, the other thing too, you know, you're looking at that rise is that that root system that fine Really aggregates things really nice. Yeah, it is. It's gorgeous. Gorgeous. So maybe we should take a sample of this over to the other Right, let's do that. Location. Okay, cool. Do it All right Okay, tell us about this field. Well, you know this this field actually was till about 10 days ago It's it's an anit soil. It's the same anit that we were looking at in the inside And what's interesting to me is is you go out here you take a spade full of soil And people will look at that and say well, oh, well, that looks fine. That looks great There's nothing wrong with that. The other problem is they don't have any context So we went over and got the anit soil the way it was supposed to look and look at the organic matter differences I mean, you don't have to be a soil scientist to figure out this look at the soil structural differences You know, you can see that you've got really nice granular structure Um in this sample how deep that organic matter actually looks like and this thing we've tilled it up And we've actually got some angular blocky. It's really fluffy on that surface. It's broken out really Um, well, it actually did cross over really really, uh A lot on that surface you can see that crusting. Yeah from that raindrop impact, right, right? But you know that to me that that's a really interesting thing is is Is just how much start difference that is in an organic matter just just comes right out at you Yeah, no, definitely and then you also pointed out about the the weeds that well, yeah Yeah, we we talk about that all the time this this the weed pressure that we have out in fields, etc And yet we're building that weed seed bank out here and how are we doing that? Well, we're bearing this the Well in this particular case resistant kosher Then we're telling it down. We're gonna we're gonna get rid of it Well, then it comes right back at us again, and this was 10 days ago and it flushes again on it. Yeah So so is tillage really the the solution to the weed management? No, it's not In fact, it's it's the opposite. Absolutely. It is the opposite I mean every roughly 10 years we have a severe drought during the winter months we can have some really cold stretches and and glow below zero for quite a while So there's a lot of variation in in temperature a lot of variation in in moisture