 The smell of that stuff, you know, it's alive. It's not dead. I just enjoy watching Mother Nature working. I mean, if you've never been around doing composting, and then you see it change on a daily basis, as you turn it, it's impressive. Most people say, well, that can't be that. To this, it is. The manure pile itself, as a composted, stays at a fairly high temperature. But it'll only do that if you keep it turned over and keep it aerated and give the bacteria some oxygen to live on. When I joined the farm as the agronomist, I quickly identified we could do a better job with this fertility and make it kind of the hub of our fertility program. But the only way we were going to be able to do that was to get it in a transportable package, so to speak. And that's where you fall back on the idea of composting. Diversification is important. Utilizing the acres that you have, soil health, all those buzzwords, compost, is at the peak of that. Yeah, it's been 15 years since I've started to do this. And every year is a new experience, but I really enjoy doing it and I enjoy talking about it. We're taking that management, that stewardship, to the next level. And we're going to have to start moving away from the synthetic fertilizers, from relying on that. And if we're about building our soil health, it's putting that organic matter back on the soil.