 What we kind of have, I like to describe it as like a pyramid of cattle, so the top of our pyramid is our registered brangus herd, and that kind of funnels down. There's about 30 registered cows in our herd, and then our commercial cow calf herd, which is about 250 commercial mama cows and calves, and then under that are stockers. We buy 20 to 40 stockers a week to go with our home raised calves and ship about semi load a month out to feedlots where we retain ownership and sell directly to the packer. So about nine years ago there was six farmers that did soccer cattle, and we all got together and started talking that we could build a feed store to get our feed cost cheaper, and so we went in and built a facility, and we started mixing feed for ourselves, and then we opened it up to the public and started selling to customers, and we are about 15 to 20 percent of the business now. We run about 600 customers. You know I've never really considered any other career choice, and it's really special to me to get to work with my dad and my husband every day, and just kind of continue doing what the generations before me have put into place. So we got Payne who's eight and Paxton's six. They help out on the ranch with us every day that the weather's getting up for them. Payne can drive the semi at eight in the field Holland Hay. Paxton can drive the tractor in the Savaside to Rake Hay, and it's a lot of fun having too little many me's running around. I feel like you know a lot of people like to get their kids you know a backyard pet or something to help them learn those life skills, but what a blessing it is that this is our livelihood, and like on Facebook and stuff I would give preschool updates because we never sent the boys to a formal preschool. We just had them with us on the ranch as long as we could because we knew what what we could teach them whether it be the same thing they would have learned in preschool or not, but it was just the environment that we wanted them to be in. We want to be sure to continue the legacy of Shereen Farms I mean forever. I mean just what he's built and then what we've built the short time we've been married to make that name bigger and more well known around here. It means a lot to us. We're proud to promote agriculture. We enjoy having school-aged kids come out, field trips or church groups or anybody that wants to learn about agriculture. We love hosting them. We'll show them cattle, horses, cats, whatever the kids want to show them, but we're really proud to be in agriculture and it gets a bad rap a lot, but if people are just willing to come out and listen and learn and see what we do I think we could change our mind pretty easily and just live in the dream. Yeah I think we love the dream every day that we get to wake up and raise our family here at the ranch.