 We started three or four days ago in our first soybean patch and they were bumping the 60s and 70s, so that was pretty nice. We are running across a few paths that are touching 100. And our combine's been calibrated, so that's exciting. If they'll stay in the 60 to 70 bushel range, that would be just fine. We've got a lot of money in this crop. Of course, like everybody, the fertilizer prices have been awful. We pumped, July and August was pretty tough. We've watered most every week, electric rates are high. Diesel's ridiculous, 13, 50, $14 beans, $15 beans are a necessity to keep our soybean farmers in business for another year. Where you've had water, we're doing fine. But anything outside of the polypipelines, our soil textures here in this part of Woodruff and Monroe counties, we have a thin topsoil and water is our limiting factor. If you were able to get water across in a timely manner, I think this year's crop would be okay. Compared to the last couple years, we've generally had a rain in July. You know, that fourth of July rain is what people always beg for. We just did not have it this time, just not enough to really count. And I would think where you had water, this crop could be better because we had a lot of heat units, a lot of sunshine and it looks pretty good for now. My son Zachary, he started his first harvest when he was 14 and from that day forward, he's just been here ever since. He's brought me kicking and screaming into the technological side of the yield maps and monitoring and we did some grid samples back earlier before he was around, but he's brought us into the yield mapping and it shows where I have failed in years past with our irrigation, where the water's not getting to the end. The yield map will tell you exactly what you've done wrong. And when I'm at a Farm Bureau meeting or off somewhere, I can pull up my laptop and I can see what he's doing and to see the highs and the lows. And on all our irrigation, we use the computerized hole selection and that's just been a game changer, money saver. Less fuel, less water. Less water in the ditches, it'll give you a 24 hour or a timeframe as to how far and how long your irrigation needs to run. If you're pumping in a ditch or overnight or there's things you can change with that computerized hole selection, it just makes money.