sounds easy enough, but of course it's not. joshua niko and j spent years perfecting their technology and process. now they think they're ready to be competitive or making tens of pounds of fertilizer today. ah willard relatively small team and we're ceiling of that process rapidly. we want to be making tons of fertilizing next year. at which point we'll be ready to implement our 1st like commercial scale system, michael hasty runs his family medium, large farm, and 3rd generation. this year, fertilizing his crops was a major challenge for him also. so he went back to utilizing the oldest fertilizer of the mom. maybe in my father's or my grandfather's generation manure was, was a waste product. you know, when your livestock producers you just wanted to get rid of it. you just go dump it somewhere. well then that slowly transition to people realize what an asset that was to now it's a highly sought after asset. it's even goes to as far where people will put up livestock facilities, whether be hogs or chickens or turkeys or cattle. just for the only purpose of the manure they're going t