 This is a very short clip, but Jesse talks about how multi-species cover crops have helped him in many aspects of his cash crop farming operation. We've been experimenting with some different things as the last couple of years have gone on, and of course we don't have it all figured out. But I think we're getting to that point now where we got something that's going to work pretty good for us. The cover crops that I like best, I guess for us, would be putting like a rye, a turnip, and a rapeseed mix in after the oats. That way it's good for grazing, and then your brass guzzle frost kill, and then the next year you've got that rye that comes up, and then we can plant our soybeans into that rye. And no-tilling beans in a rye is just, you can't believe the difference between that and just going into straight corn stubble. You know, the roots basically, it's like kind of planted into a golf course. I mean, the soil structure is beautiful, your infiltration rate is beautiful, and that the early rye growth basically uses up a lot of that excess of moisture in those wet spots that normally can't traffic through. Like I said, it's unbelievable the difference that rye makes for trafficability, and then they're using up some of that excess of water. A lot of people are concerned about using up that water, and they think that it's going to be competing against water in the growing season, which isn't the case. That's not, I've never experienced that problem. It's nothing but an attribute, you know, helping us get in there and taking away the excessive moisture. You know, the big thing is, is you've got to get your rye in at the right time, and the spring growth is the big thing. You know, if you can, if you raise a small grain, you can plant your rye around that 20th of September or before, and in the springtime, you know, you can be planting a rye that's three feet tall, and if it's that tall, it's really doing something. And when you go over the top with your drill, it just lays over a nice mat, you know, it's basically a mulch, and it helps choke out all the weeds. It really works well. Say you're in just a straight corn soybean rotation, you're in a very low carbon environment, and they're very, very poor soil structure. When you go and you try and plant with that, you basically, you make a furrow, and it creates the sidewalls on the side, and those roots can't penetrate through that, and then they just kind of grow straight down.