Probably poisoned the ground, so I was just devastated that you could, you know, basically drink it. Guy come up and say, hey. You know, I bought a whole bunch of seed from a seed company. It's good alfalfa, but it was seconds. And he said, I can sell you this this, alfalfa seed for two dollars a pound. And I was like, man, this is awesome. I'll buy thirty pounds per the acre. It ended up being a a bad deal for me. The alfalfa didn't grow very well. I had large spots. It was open. I called the alfalfa company up and they said, hey, you know, we we've got this other type of seed that we might be able to mix with it. And I ended up doing thirty pounds to the acre, and it's really expensive seed. My first cutting probably got a half a ton of the acre, maybe three quarters of a ton of the acre, so I was just devastated. I think that the the cheap seed that did take probably poisoned the ground for the new seed, so it didn't take. I started looking online for different ways that I might be able to make it better, And I ran into the commercial, and so I called them and I put about seventeen thousand dollars worth of product on that first year. And my first and second crop, I did notice significant increase in tonnage and my relative feed value did increase. And then on my third cutting, my relative feed value was just through the roof. It was like two hundred and twenty, and so I was really pleased with that. Especially the last few years, alfalfa has not been a really productive farm commodity. If you have just regular feeder hay, it's generally around a hundred and twenty to a hundred and thirty dollars a ton versus feed that has relative feed value on it, it will generally sell by the point value. So if you have supreme hay is a hundred and eighty on the relative feed value, so you get a hundred and eighty dollars a ton. If you have your relative feed value is two hundred, you could probably get up to that supreme of two hundred dollars a ton. It's really important that I get that high feed value so that I can at least, break even or make a little bit of a profit. Generally, in first crop, you know, you get a hundred and forty to a hundred and fifty on the relative feed value, and I was up to a hundred and seventy five that that first crop first year, so I was really pleased with that. And my second crop was right up into the hundred and seventy to a hundred and eighty on my relative feed value on second crop, and like I say, third crop was up to above two hundred. I still had some pretty thin areas in the alfalfa field, so I found another guy that said that if I put milk whey grass seed in with the alfalfa, it would bulk it up and the alfalfa wouldn't kill the grass. So I did that, increased my, tonnage with the with the alfalfa and and the grass and with the RioGen. And so it's really hard to tell, but I was happy with the production. I was happy with the bulk. I was happy with with how things were going. And so I ended up with eight ton to the acre through the year. Generally, I only get six with a ton to the acre with with three crops. This year, I got four crops. Generally, four to five years on alfalfa is is top. And the alfalfa that you see behind me, it's it's in its sixth year. I'll get one more year out of it, and then I'll I'll put it into barley next year. And that was the selling point for Rhyzogreen is it is a organic type of fertilizer. You know, you could you could, you know, basically drink it and it's not gonna hurt you, you know, not that I would, but I was really super happy about that and and that's that was the big selling point of the whole thing. I do sell to some of the dairies that that want that organic type of feed to feed their animals. The Rhyzogreen team, has been exceptionally, easy to talk to, and they came out to my place. They walked the property. They, gave me good hints on what I needed to do to maybe improve my crop. Very pleasant, very familiar to work with, and appreciated those guys.