 And here are my beans. This is kind of a hair-brained trellis where I just ran some strings along the top here after growing them up to make it out. This fence here. And I didn't expect the string to hold the weight of the beans, which you can see that clearly it did not support the weight of the beans. But I just needed something quick and dirty and that was what I had on hand so that's what I did in the following years. I would probably run fence all the way up these posts rather than continuing to try to make the string work when it clearly can't. But this side did do much better because this is pretty much soil level. I buried a little bit of wood and mulch and things underneath the compost to feed the stuff that I planted in here. And this side was more or less able to get as much water as it wanted. This side was planted exactly the same way. You can see there are some beans, mostly it's all empty and squashes start to grow in through the fence. The reason that this side is mostly empty is because even after five days of non-stop rain it's still more or less bone dry. And that is because the land here kind of sloped down and bringing it up to level I had to put a lot more wood and mulch and things underneath this bed before I topped it with compost. That means there's an air gap. And so even though there's the same amount of compost on top here it wasn't able to make contact with the native soil and drop moisture so almost nothing on this section of the garden got as much water as it really wanted. And the beans were the thing that suffered the most for that. On the other side they're happy and fine. They got everything that they wanted. On this side very few of them managed to even survive. This one is producing beans. I don't think any of these are dry enough to pick yet but it produced beans and that's fine. The reason it's fine is because now this side becomes my seed stock for dry farmed beans. And I mean by that is that the things that survived not only survived because they have the genetics that allowed them to survive with very little water but also because they survived in conditions with very little water they are now primed for that. The epigenetics that they're passing on to their offspring are going to let their offspring know, hey, you aren't going to have water available. Be prepared for it. And so what I would expect to see is that grab this bean right here, crack it open, camera situated. I take these beans and replant them. They're going to be very suited to growing in dry conditions because their mother already prepared them for that possibility. And even though these plants over here look so much better than these plants over here. When I plant these seeds in conditions that are dry, they are going to outperform seeds from those plants in the same conditions.