 This is the worst I've ever seen it. I've been here for ten years. Most people have never seen this much of an impact on the harvest. There's a lot of touch points that everybody uses daily that we're all gonna suffer. There's not enough water in the Mississippi River and the toes aren't able to get through the river right now and so they're not able to get the empty barges to all the export facilities in the state. The impacts from the low water from the Mississippi River are really starting to take an impact statewide. We've been in the harvest for several weeks in South Arkansas, but as the harvest moves north it becomes more and more of a limiting factor. If we can't get some water up north, some rain, farmers won't have anywhere to go and they don't have many options. So they'll have to leave it in the field which could lose yield or they have to find somewhere to go and potentially leave them on a barge for a long periods of time can deter the quality. Well with the harvest about 40% complete, you still have 60% left in the field and we have an estimated production in Arkansas this year of approximately 160 million bushels. So there are a lot of soybeans out there that are needing to find a home. We've had toes come through the river at Pendleton pushing two or three boats at a time or two or three barges at a time and usually they got 12-15. Several weeks ago when harvest started we had premiums for September delivery because of the export program was very strong. There were a lot of basis bids at 50 cents over the Chicago price. Currently a lot of the river locations are a dollar under the Chicago price to a dollar 25 under the Chicago price. So it's had a huge impact on on the basis and then this week it's starting to also have a negative impact on the Chicago market as well. So all in all the state of Arkansas is probably close to 40% harvested. I would say down south it's a little more. We were able to start early and get the crop in in a timely fashion and that let us start early with harvest. By doing that we were able to get everything harvested that was green that needed to be hauled off before we personally started having problems with the river. Some people had didn't get that opportunity maybe larger maybe they weren't diversified like we are where we have gotten to be able to take up some acres. Therefore some people have had to have either have a contract or leave their crops sit in the field or if they can find some storage that they can rent from somebody if they fill their own up then they're able to do that. Not everybody's had that luxury. There's some really long lines at some export terminals you know when the barges didn't show up on time a lot of delays. The other thing that that's done is for the folks that either didn't have a contract and are getting delivered or had a little bit of overage and needed to get that contract taken care of where they might have been getting a even or a positive basis earlier in the year that basis has turned very much negative. As we progress it's going to get tougher and tougher and the harvest is moving into into North Arkansas a little bit more so storage everywhere is going to be a huge issue. The thing about water here that river being as close as it is we get some aquifer refilling that we may not get this year and that could be a problem and we already had a dry fall the last major the last significant rainfall we had was well over a year ago. Fertilizer coming up the river going up the river to other states it's going to be an issue how is it going to get there if there's no water. We're from the farming perspective so obviously we're concerned with the green but with the Mississippi River shut down there's a lot of things that aren't going to make it where they got to go even like the stuff that gets shipped from overseas coming to the Gulf to go up the Mississippi you're not going to get that stuff whether it be food or you know just everyday items that people need.