 This farm, part of it he inherited from his grandfather and parts of it we have bought along the way. It's now about 500 acres. As a little boy, my father gave me one cow, so everything worked from that. And me and my father had cows together until about, I don't know, 2000. And he took his then, so we kind of separated our cows. And so me and Anita have had them. We just mainly have had Charley. Nothing registered other than the bulls that we purchase. Everything else has been raised here on the farm. But we do that and cut and bale our own hay. Everything's done by the family. We have two daughters, Amanda and Kelly. They both live really close. Kelly lives behind us. She built a house. Amanda's about a quarter of a mile that way. I have plants that he gets tired of moving every year. So I said, build me a green house. Just build me a green house. And I will tend to them also. Well, Amanda, daddy, I've always wanted a green house. And it was the first one. That was the first one. And now there are three hot houses. We're putting up two more. And then of course the shade house and then a shed that he built for her to sell pots and clay and stuff. Amanda runs the greenhouse full time. We're really hoping to expand out on some of our native plants. The Audubon gave us, they called and said, I believe they've extended their program for three more years. So we're talking about putting in some extra rows with some new species in. We're in that little strip of Blackland Prairie that runs down into Texas. And so it's a really unique habitat here in this part of the state. It's just one little strip that runs kind of diagonally from Texas on up. And so we have an opportunity to really put some really unique plants in. We plan on expanding the native along with the greenhouses. We're already planning on two more greenhouses and actually started on the first one. And then maybe plan on two or three more. Amanda keeps finding more things for us to do. And I think Kelly's got some plans of her own that we're probably going to include all of us too. It's something we've always done. We grew up in it. And I feel like in the scheme of things in this country, I feel like it's kind of dying out. We're losing those family farms and we're losing that everything. And so it's just something that we've always kind of felt strongly about keeping it going. And I've always wanted my kids to be really involved in it and try to keep this land that our families had for all these years and make something out of it and make it something that can last.