 Are any of you a part of a financial evaluation group or you can compare to other farms that you don't know but you know you're kind of in a pool and you can kind of see how you're doing like Mitchell Tech or any of those things. Have you learned anything from that if anybody's in any of that? I know you are. Yeah, does that help you a lot? Yeah, you need to compare your machinery costs and things like that to everybody else and it's a big difference. You like where you see? Yeah, I mean one thing that I never really realized was you could probably trade your high horsepower tractor and all your tillage equipment and buy a no-till setup and still have money left over. You just don't need all those extra implements that the other folks in that program have. Yep, you don't need a four-wheel drive, you don't need three pieces of tillage equipment. The time thing is a big issue. It takes time to go out there and do that prepping. Labor and fuel costs got added. Yeah, let alone your equipment. But yeah, time was a big deal. I used to have my dad disk or field cultivate ahead of me and now he said he didn't have much to do this spring. Buy a tile plow. Yeah, so he noticed a big difference and he was a big skeptic, you know, doing tillage his whole life. Bet you didn't have to call a fuel truck as many times either. No, not even close. What I noticed a lot is the hours on the equipment, on the tractor and all of that. The equipment seems to last a lot longer, you know, than if you're putting many hours on there. Resale value has got to be better, you know, if you're into that. Sure. The hours on it isn't as hard. Right. Yeah. Yeah, no-till drill pulls a lot lighter than a ripper, that's for sure.