 Acres are going to be very similar to kind of how we have been. We've been having pretty good luck, especially last year with raw rice. We're probably going to increase that. Another 10%, we're roughly 40% raw rice this year on my place, or our places here. Had everything looked great, we were probably as timely getting our crop planted as we've been, at least with our rice and soy beans and corn. I mean, we were doing great. I would say the middle of June is probably one of the best-looking crops I ever had going at that point in a year. And then the floods came, and we got 10 to 12 inches of rain right here over the course of about four or five days, bottom ends being drowned out, hurt a lot of corn, and, you know, things somewhat turned the corner. You know, these rains and this front coming through, I mean, certainly a slowdown, the biggest thing we can hope for. And it seems like we have this conversation at some point every fall, whether it's just a front or a hurricane, hopefully no more this year, but about, you know, what's worse, rain or wind? And the answer is both at the same time. I mean, we've had, you know, the input price is increasing, of course, you know, going into this year, the commodity prices were up, corn, rice, and soy beans, everything looked profitable, and, you know, I expect we'll still make a profit, but I don't, I mean, I think everyone kind of anticipated input prices to go up, but, you know, availability of some herbicides, and they were talk of shortages on the fungicides, and then fertilizer prices just continued to climb since then. A lot of this rice has been ready to harvest for a while now, but due to the humidity and the conditions we've had, the grain moisture just hasn't wanted to fall out. That's a problem. Knowing it needs to come out of the field and it just not being where, you know, functionally for growers to go ahead and take it out in some increased drying costs and things that are associated with it. So we're going to finally get that now with this weather shift that'll follow these rain events now, but the problem is these big, re-wetting events may not be good for milling on those that have been sitting out there, again, wetting and drying, causing fishers in those kernels that'll make them crack and may lower some of our milling yields. So I mean, from a yield standpoint, so far top to bottom in the state, there just is not much talk of anything other than these are great yields, and, you know, there's always an outlying field that, you know, seems off, you know, and there's something wrong, but by and large, just reporting very good to great to excellent yields. And, again, that's from the Southeastern part of the state all the way up to the Missouri line. You know, everybody I've talked to, for the most part, has been pleased with yields. I've talked to one guy that's been pretty disappointed, but most everybody's sitting on, not a record, I don't know anybody that I've talked to that's had a record. They may have had a, you know, a few fields that were really, really good and some and then there's some variability from the guys I've talked to. But all in all, it's been a pretty good crop. I mean, we're about two thirds of the way through harvest, I would say. That's probably about average for the area. Maybe it may be a little further along. We've had some mechanical problems and things that put us behind a little bit. But, you know, hopefully we'll and the weather's been phenomenal up until today, as you can see, but it's, we had three weeks of about as perfect the harvest weather you could have, although I wouldn't mind a little rain because it's so dusty around here. Well, the nice thing about the current forecast right now is really the next 10 days looks cool, looks dry, low humidity. And if you've largely escaped much in the way it rains, you know, over the past between today and a few days ago, the next 10 days, there is going to be a massive amount of rice in the state disappeared.