 Grazing the multi-species cover crops. We were talking about it earlier. Is that a relatively new thing that you've got? I think it is and I mean, you know, that's You know, it's been a short period of years that we've been involved with that now and I think to this day we're still Tweaking the species that are involved in the cover crop that we plant trading to You know and in different fields, we may have different goals as to what we're trying to incorporate into that seed package that we're using for a cover crop. How's that penciling out in terms of dollars per acre and dollars on investment say versus a row cropping situation? Depends on the year and how and and and the the price of corn, wheat and beans and it's safe and the feed that that we need. Yeah. Yeah, the big thing is it works so well together Yes, to me. That's that's the the really important thing That it works so well together We have run as many as 80 pair out on a field of cover crop for a month There was a good fall That cover crop was actually growing while those pairs were were out on it We we turned them out. Okay, they did a they did a great job of Grazing over the right the whole piece and then you went and planted that the next year in a row crop into corn Okay, corn did well corn did very well. Okay. Yeah. Yeah, we were concerned about the compaction Yes, and I really had very little issues with it residue was good or moisture conditions were good and Of course, we freeze hard a cut and that allows For a little loosening of that. Yeah top soil as we Started rotational grazing no till farming now It's almost unusual to have much water in the dams or in the dugouts Because the water is held through the soil profile