 Hi, I'm Barry Little. Hello, I'm Eli Little. We're sitting here at my farm in Castlewood, South Dakota. We've been farming together for about 10 years now and putting a lot of focus on soil health. We grow corn, soybeans, and wheat with a little bit of oats. And we raise beef cows, sheep, hogs, and chickens. We've started growing more small grain because we can integrate cover crops into that more easily. And we're all about getting livestock on as many acres as we can every year so that they can benefit soil health. South Dakota was exceptionally wet in 2019. You go through years of drought and you go through years like last year where you get extra moisture. We were able to plant over 90% of all of our fields which was a little unusual around here and we attribute that to the soil health. Having soil structure and doing no till, you kind of smooth out those years. You're not as stressed from drought. We feel like if we get the moisture that God gave us and leave it where it's supposed to be, we can get through most any year. You're holding soil structure in the wet years. We were able to get a lot more of a percentage of our crops in last year than the conventional people. And we don't see near the stress in the middle of summer that a lot of people are seeing. It was three years ago that we had a devastating hail storm and just about all of our soybeans had to be replanted and we had a lot of corn that was lost. But to us that was an opportunity to plant some cover crops on the 1st of July which grew up to be fantastic cow feed in December and January of the next year. Every year I put together a cash flow plan and every year I managed to reduce my input costs. We think we have better fertility and better water infiltration and we're starting to cut back on fertilizer inputs which is helping the bottom line. Most of my conventional ranching neighbors don't see the point and I don't think they want to think it through because they like doing what they do. I can think of a couple neighbors. Their stress level, if it starts getting dry it goes through the roof. I don't think there's near as many variables for me to worry about that there used to be. I think I'm more realistically confident now than I was then. I see the way that we're doing things is on the right path. We know we can still get the yields we want with the lower population and doing the low till or no till it helps to just, we can get by with a lot less rain we can get by with a lot extra rain. I don't think there'd be room on this farm for me if we weren't doing what we're doing right now and my thought is why don't we all control our own destiny here. It's a cliche but I'm living the dream. I got three granddaughters that lived two miles away that are a joy to have around and I'm farming with my son Eli.