 Yeah we're here in Monroe County today, June the 10th. Usually when I try to finish up planting my soy beans by the 10th and you can see what I've got facing me today. I don't know exactly how long it's going to take for it to dry up but what we're facing in this area is a late crop. We had a good crop going, getting a good stand with our crop. The corn crop was going good but we just hadn't had any breathing room as far as sunshine and dry weather and I don't know what it's going to, how it's going to end up but I know it's going to impact farmers across Arkansas. I do know there's a lot of areas in the state that's worse than I am. We've had this, I know for the last five or six years, pretty consistent year in and year out. Seems like we're replanting this year's a little bit later in 2014. I had it even worse than this but it seems like year in and year out now is consistently we've been losing crops. I don't know if that's a climate change thing or what but it just seems like it's been consistent with us from what we had to come back and replant our soy beans mainly. Farmers are trying to do the best job they can and what we face day to day is just not a cake walk. We spend a lot of money putting this crop in and it can be taken away from us in some places three or four hours. It's gone. That's much rainfall we get in a certain time.