 At the beginning, whenever my grandpa Wilson first found this place, and that was back in the 40s. He'd come down through here, of course all this wasn't the hill, we still had the tracks, but he brought my grandma down here and he'd come across the tracks, and they went down this road and they went down this field and saw the farm, and he got back to town and grandpa said, well, what do you think about that? And grandma said, I wouldn't have it if you wasn't trying to give it to me. And he said, that's good, but we just bought it. And so that's where it started. This is over south farm down here, and we gone ahead, and like I said, that was in the 40s. It wasn't very long after that, and he put up this barn out here and he had some cattle. And he started raising some cattle along with crops. And so he had his hands in both pots, so he still maintained a little bit of a herb, but he died when he was 45 years old. That was in 1955, 46 years old maybe. But after his death, my dad was 20 years old. He took over the farm and it was just trying to raise the cattle, and the grains was just a little bit much, and he really didn't have a big interest in cattle, so he got rid of them. But we maintained the barn, and we're trying, we've got a couple of horses out here right now, and we try to keep it up because it is a landmark, so to speak. It's been here since the early 50s at least, I know it might have been the late 40s, but I'm thinking it was the early 50s, and we're trying to keep it up and maintain it kind of as a landmark to the farm. A farm now is mostly grains, and we raise rice and soybeans mostly. We have raised wheat, and we have raised corn, and that's something I might be interested in getting back into with the fur irrigation and all of that, if you get your ground precision level and get it to where you can fur irrigate it, it works well. This is the latter part of April, and we're just, we're not really behind in our crops as far as getting things planted, but we're not ahead either, we're just kind of right in between. Normally we'd like to try to start planting around the first of April, and so in that regard it's been wet, it has been wet the last few years as far as trying to get the crops in, but we are making progress. We've got the drills going right now, we've got the other field preparation going, trying to get things ready to go ahead and get our rice in the ground. Now, beans will be coming along the latter part of May, the first part of June. That's normally whenever we try to plant our beans. We've got some of our rice planted, we've still got a lot of acres to go yet. Lord's been good to us, we've had some good weather here lately and we've been able to go ahead and work our fields and get them ready and just start putting it in the ground.