 trying to finish up peanut harvest today. We're still a couple of days out but we're down to that last couple hundred acres so feeling pretty good today. Conditions are good today. Overall we've had a pretty good harvest. It's been a with peanut harvest it's always slow and it's not being as slow as some years but it's still pretty slow. There's very little crop in the field at this point everybody's got most of the crop out. You see a few scattered fields here and there but for the most part I think everybody's going to get close to being finished up by this time this rain hits. It's been a good harvest. We've been really really blessed. The way peanut harvest starts sometime in September middle to the end of September we go to start checking maturity on the on the peanuts. You walk out here in the field at that point and it's solid green. It's a pretty green carpet and we've decided the maturity is right we start digging. At that point we have to let it set for anywhere from five to ten days depending on the weather for those vines and the peanuts themselves to dry out. At that point we'll start running combines to the field like you see behind us. Those combines pick up those vines and nuts and they use spring fingers to separate those peanuts in shell off the vine and they get blown up in those baskets to dump them in the duff cart and they get eventually put into a semi-trailer. Our peanuts go to Pocahontas first they eventually get taken to Jonesboro to be shelled. These peanuts will be shelled by Delta Peanut Company and ours are Hyalelat peanuts which is a special longer shelf life variety peanut and those peanuts are used in peanut butter and your candies are peanuts M&M Mars by some for a certain size to go in peanut and M&M's and so if you eat peanut and M&M's there's a chance that you're eating peanuts grown right here in Arkansas.