 You have to make it. You've got to make the pencil hit the paper and And the farm economy is hard It's it's a hard life to make make ends meet and the diversity Helps keep things even, you know as far as income and expenses. Well, you plant wheat you've got income in August you know depending on the year the end of July He spreads out your workload a little bit if you can increase your cattle production. You've got a bigger calf check come Whenever you sell your calves or maybe you can expand your cattle operation into selling bread heifers or you sell off bread cows or You know, whatever it is if you can put a little bit more emphasis on some of those areas You you make the economics of it work a little bit better instead of just having Corn soybeans and that's you get your check in the fall or you mark it throughout the year, of course But you're not just solely relying on those two things and when you have a drought you're just kind of like oh Whoops Yeah, insurance money, right So you're you're spreading out your risk and You're you're spreading out your wealth also and you get you end up with a higher return on those cattle by Incorporating them back into some of your crop land where you're have those small grains and cover crops and you know it That is a pretty high return for your cattle for feed there It all works out and it's it's good for the ground as well. You're gonna see that benefit When you plant another row crop in there It makes you think back then okay We're doing something right and it's that whole system of you know the diversity in the no-till and Having the cattle, you know grazing different areas that we had not in the past and You're allowed to withstand those ups and downs in the economy and the weather you will survive and Live to farm another day You never know the result unless you try something you've got to be open to giving something a try Changing your approach on something a little bit and testing it You can't just sit and maintain and expect to Last in this industry