 Harvest was probably, you know, ahead of schedule, especially, you know, with the lake plantings that we had and then the flooding issues we had down in the southeast corner of the state. So, you know, here we're practically done. Harvest was all over the board, heard some really good yields, heard some, you know, not-so-good yields. Some of the issues that we dealt with was a lot of green stem in fields. We also had green stem in our research plots. Just got back from agronomy meetings and there was probably, you know, 12 soybean agronomists from across the U.S. Just about everybody I talked to at the meetings had some level of green stem this past year. We're still continuing to see really good yields in the state. Right now, USDA has us at around 50 bushels state average. For the way we started and then mid-season, I think that's really excellent, you know, with some of the conditions we had this year. So those numbers could change. You know, typically the final numbers don't come out until February. So, you know, we're kind of set and looking pretty good compared to the last several years with the conditions that we had this past year. You know, with the pandemic and, you know, different things in different countries, there's a lot of rumblings about shortages on just about anything that deals with agriculture. Equipment shortage, pesticide shortages, fertility shortages, labor shortages. And so, you know, it looks like it's going to be a struggle next year to really, you know, really have a good crop. We're in the process of finalizing the 2022 budgets for all the commodities. I've looked at some of them. You know, specifically talking about soybeans, if you just look at fuel and fertility associated with the soybean budgets, we've had to increase those budgets $70 just by fuel and fertilizer costs. You know, we can still do well and have good yields next year, but it's just going to be a struggle. You know, by increasing those budgets, you're just going to have to increase your production, you know, to break even. And, you know, some of the numbers I've seen, we're going to have to have, you know, yields better than the state average. We've had the last several years to break even. The good thing is Dr. Trent Roberts and Dr. Nathan Slayton have been doing a lot of work on potassium and fertility. And I'll be presenting a lot of this information at production meetings. We're working on some blog posts and things like that. But we've got a number of different tools to help farmers, you know, judge if we need to look at additional fertility. The first of January is when those production meetings start. So we're back to face-to-face meetings unless something changes in the next few weeks. But I'm excited. I'm ready to get back out and see farmers face-to-face and have that interaction.