 Obviously the economics of farming have to work and that's where you still have to be able to pencil a profit or you hope to pencil a profit when you're putting in your grain and so wheat is borderline, but we've found that we can produce the yields for our wheat that can make it profitable and then by following with a cover crop our corn and our soybeans are more profitable than next year so you can't tie that just that one year's profitability to spring wheat. I mean you've got to take that extra gain you get from corn and beans and attribute that back to your small grain. So yeah Shane told me something like a 50% yield bump behind the wheat, is that correct? Yeah I'd say yes. And that's for corn and soybeans or was that for a particular crop? It's probably both, both in this area. Having that small grain in your rotation you have a lot better weed suppression. We necessarily don't have the weed problems that maybe some neighbors have. Residue from the weed or the small grains creates a nice cover on the soil so your weed seeds aren't even getting in there to germinate.