 Corn is probably our biggest fertilizer user of all the crops we grow, so that really weighed on our producers minds about, okay, good corn prices, I want to plant corn, I like the rotation, boy, that's fertilizer price, I got to get some good yields to counterbalance that extra expense there. Our planting intentions, the report come out into March, thought we would plant about 750,000 acres, and that was off about 100,000 from a year ago. A year ago we had about 850,000, so we're expecting maybe 750 this year. I felt like that drop in acres was probably all related to fertilizer price, and so we felt like we might be off a little bit in some areas, but when it comes down to reality, weather dictates a lot of things, right? And so I know we had a wet period in there, probably in the ideal planting time, and so we ended up getting a lot of corn planted that end of April, early May. Which is later than what a lot of people like to plant, so that later planted we probably switched some of those corn acres back to maybe cotton or soybeans, but I think in the end we got pretty close to what we normally, what we intended for a lot of folks. Now certain areas we probably didn't get there, but a lot of areas we got up to where we really felt like we wanted to be at. Right now, in the June, it's almost 90 degrees out here in the morning, right? It's hot. That's probably the biggest issue we're facing right now. I mean, corn, a lot of our corn, is it silked last week, or beginning of silking, or will be silking coming up here shortly, so silking, tasseling is a pretty critical time, and so in some instances in past years we've had some pollination issues, and so that we always see, or typically see, pollination issues where we get high temperatures combined with lack of water, and we've got that right now. So if you drive around the countryside, you see every well running, and so from a management standpoint, trying to keep everything irrigated up is really the key. So corn, like us, we don't like that 98 degree temperature, do we? Well, one way that we can counterbalance some of those effects is to keep everything watered, and so typically in the past, if we're able to keep things watered, we're still able to get good pollination, even though the temperatures are really high. You know, a rain, you know, with the proverbial million dollar rain, well, I think that's probably cutting it short, you know, maybe a hundred million dollar rain, you know. Every well is running, a five dollar diesel, or whatever they've got it booked for, it's expensive, and so a rain right now, late June, I mean, we're at peak water demand on corn, you know, typically a week or two prior to tassel, a week or two after tassel. That month timeframe in there is really, we're at peak water demand, and so yeah, any way we can shut those wells off for a few days would go a long ways.