Yeah, well again, kind of the story starts with just in general, from years and years ago, kind of always being just into plants. There was never really any formal education regarding that. But it was just one of those things that kind of like bit and stuck. So it's one of those things that everybody has, that that just kind of seems to come natural to you, where information is retained pretty easily. You're passionate about it. It's fun. So when it comes to spending hours and hours in books to make up for the fact of lack of, like, a formal education in that arena. You don't mind it, you know, you really enjoy it. And that kind of all kind of came about to I had four or five some four or five some friends that when started a CBD company years ago, and they needed somebody to run their grow. So they reached out Sure, and I was stoked on the opportunity, because I had been messing around with it for a while, and at that point, you know, you're, you're pretty good at it before you jump into that. But it was a chance to kind of take it to that next level, to do that as something as like a profession. So I was, I was really, really excited about. Opportunity, and kind of where Riverview comes into this is when we were starting that we didn't have the infrastructure at that point to be mixing large volumes of these amended, heavily amended, like engineered soil mixes, like people are used to seeing with that, you know, living soils. So we ended up having to ship a lot of that in and it it kind of didn't sit with me, right? But there really wasn't any other option in the Midwest. You know, we had to ship that from a long ways off. And so not only is freight crazy, so if anybody's reached out to us, especially as home growers, and it's like, we can't deliver that ourselves. And people kind of get that freight quote that I send them, and it's kind of sticker shock, because, like, soil is heavy, right? It's, it's not easy to ship around the country. So absolutely, when we shipped that in, I was just, oh, like, it, it wasn't fun to look at how much we had to pay to do that. And I remember right at that moment, I was like, wow, there is a huge opportunity for somebody in the Midwest to create something like this. And at that point in time, I wasn't thinking, like, man, that's going to be me, but I was like, someone can do this. I'm like, there's a huge void from Missouri and the surrounding states and even out east a bit to kind of fill that gap. So fast forward a few years, and I end up leaving that role. And I was like, okay, kind of, you know, it's kind of, what's next thing? I was like, you know, there's still nothing there. I'm gonna take a crack at this, because at that point, you've been doing this for a while, you're pretty comfortable around organic cultivation and building soils, and then understanding kind of the soil testing process and amending and kind of how to go about creating that soil mix. So it's like, okay, I can help reduce carbon footprint by helping Midwest growers not have to ship soil from so far away. I can save them money again, because they're not going to be able to ship that soil so far away. And I know, at least here in Missouri, and I've felt this a lot from other states, is there's a lot of pride in being from this area and supporting companies from the Midwest and companies from Missouri, at least from what I've seen and talking with people. So I was like, so this is it's a really cool opportunity. I feel like my skill set matches this. The timing was right. And then, so I just started, at that point, experimenting with different soil mixes, throwing plants in them, killing some some, looking really good. And then just tinkering and tweaking from that point to see how far you can start to push things until we finally settled on a mix that has been working really well, and that's our high performance mix. And then at that point, kind of the rest is history. And then here, in the past year, we're able to get into a spot that we could expand our operation. We got, again, the best thing I could ever buy myself was a soil mixer. Because I can't tell you how much it sucked early in the process. And Missouri is hot, right? So when you're doing that in the summer, it's brutal. No way out there with a shop yards and yards on tarps, yeah? Like it's the whole, like half the yard was, like dead because it was just under a tarp. It's, I don't know how many different piles we had, you know, mixing in 55 gallon drums on big like, lubed up casters to spin easy, just because those concrete mixers, at least the ones that you could go get from Harvard freight, were only three and a half cubic feet, or something like that, or three cubic feet. So I was wanting something a bit bigger, so I was just kind of mixing that round and round. So anyways, it was a lot of hard work until we're kind of able to save up to get that mixer that's cool. Man, yeah. And then at that point, we're able to kind of scale up a bit more and try to get more stores and kind of make it more accessible to growers that are wanting to either someone who's been growing for a while that's wanting to kind of switch to organics for a host of reasons, not the only way to do things, but obviously, I'm slightly biased, but I think there's a lot of advantages doing this. We're getting a lot of growers that have been growing for a long time wanting to switch, and then even more so, we're getting a lot of first time growers that want to grow quality medicine home way cheaper than they're getting at dispensaries, but either don't have the knowledge or time to dive into this deeply and want kind of a set it and forget it system to cultivate their own cannabis.