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Summary
In this transcript, the Millennial Farmer discusses the impacts of Trump's tariffs, particularly on soybeans, corn, and fertilizers, and the personal effect on his farm operations. Although the tariffs have not yet affected his crop sales, potential future impacts loom, especially concerning Canadian potash. The reduction of some EPA regulations might influence corn sales indirectly. Despite uncertainties, the farmer argues that long-term considerations should guide voting rather than short-term financial gains. Additionally, an unfulfilled government grant for a new grain dryer highlights bureaucratic challenges faced by farmers.
Highlights
Despite tariffs, current crop sales remain unaffected as of now. 🌽
Potential future effects of tariffs on fertilizer imports could change farm expenses. 🛢️
Long-term interests drive farmers' voting behavior rather than immediate gains. 🗳️
Bureaucratic delays in government grants pose challenges to farm investments. 💸
EPA regulation changes could alter the demand and market for corn. 🌾
Key Takeaways
Trump's tariffs on China have not yet impacted soybean and corn sales but future impacts are possible. 🌽
Tariffs on Canada could affect fertilizer costs, specifically potash imports. 🛢️
Farmers often prioritize long-term gains over short-term financial benefits when voting. 🗳️
Government grants can be unpredictable, impacting farmers' financial planning. 💸
Reduction in EPA regulations might shift market dynamics for corn producers. 🌾
Overview
The Millennial Farmer shares insights on the effects of Trump's tariffs on the agricultural sector, particularly focusing on soybeans, corn, and fertilizers. While current sales remain unaffected, there is a looming concern about the future, especially when it comes to potash imports from Canada. The discussion extends to political elements influencing these economic decisions.
Farmers are depicted as looking beyond immediate financial benefits when making political choices. The Millennial Farmer emphasizes the importance of long-term national interests over immediate profits. This outlook showcases a strategic approach that prioritizes the future sustainability of their farming operations.
The narrative also touches on the unpredictability of government financial aid, as seen with a stalled grant for a grain dryer. This issue highlights the complexities and challenges faced by farmers due to bureaucratic inefficiencies. Furthermore, potential changes in EPA regulations could bring shifts in corn market dynamics, underlining the constant state of flux in agricultural markets.
Chapters
00:00 - 02:30: Introduction and Winter Weather Update The chapter begins with a greeting towards Anna and the audience. The speaker explains that there have not been many videos posted recently due to the winter season in Minnesota. Typically, during this time, the region is covered in ice and snow, with the ground frozen to a depth ranging from 4 to 15 feet.
02:30 - 05:00: Equipment and Machinery Tour Preview In this chapter titled 'Equipment and Machinery Tour Preview,' the speaker discusses the limitations of farming activities during the winter season. They note that due to not having livestock, their farming activities are significantly reduced during this period. The speaker mentions that the current weather is unusually warm, with temperatures in the mid-60s, which is a record high for the date according to the weather channel. They observe that the frost is beginning to thaw in some areas, which is atypical for the time of year.
05:00 - 10:30: Tariffs Impact on Farming and Markets The chapter begins with a forecast update discussing weather conditions expected to change dramatically starting at 9:00 PM. The current time being 4:00 PM, there are only a few hours until the predicted rain begins, which is expected to turn into snow as temperatures drop significantly through the night. Depending on the final temperature, the snow forecast ranges from 1 to 16 inches. Moreover, 50 mph winds are anticipated, which will worsen conditions overnight and lead to an unpleasant morning. The speaker considers detaching a piece of equipment due to the anticipated bad weather.
10:30 - 15:00: EPA Regulations and Ethanol Discussion The chapter titled 'EPA Regulations and Ethanol Discussion' includes a conversation about plans for a future equipment or machinery tour, which is scheduled for later in the spring when things are more organized. Despite preparing for the season, no changes are being made to the current machinery setup. Specifically, the 410 8rt will be attached to the 1775 Exact Emerge planter, which is noted for its high-speed capabilities.
15:00 - 19:00: Subsidies, Grants, and Financials in Farming The chapter explores the intricacies of subsidies, grants, and financial aspects in farming, featuring anecdotes about farm life. It introduces machinery like planters and tractors, highlighting their noise as a backdrop to farm activities. While there's a love for both dogs and tractors, the preference is to keep dogs outside, showing the balance between affection and practicality in farm life. The dogs' presence is noted humorously but indicates a common farm experience where animals are a part of the environment, yet there's a need to maintain order and focus on farm tasks.
19:00 - 24:30: Planned Equipment and Farm Preparations The chapter discusses plans for equipment and farm preparations after bad weather subsides. There's mention of getting the 'square body' out, but the narrator doesn't specify what this refers to. Additionally, the narrator addresses inquiries regarding the Tariff situation, trade deals, and their voting choices in the last presidential election, clarifying that they have not disclosed who they voted for. The narrator also decides to avoid getting political as they believe most of the audience may not share the same views.
24:30 - 30:30: Government Grant Issues and Financial Implications The chapter discusses the government grant issues and their financial implications, focusing particularly on the tariff situation. It mentions that despite concerns, the actual effect of the tariffs has not been as significant as expected. There are various aspects that need addressing within the topic.
30:30 - 41:00: FBN Warehouse Tour and Product Discussion The chapter "FBN Warehouse Tour and Product Discussion" delves into the current trade tensions with China, focusing on the proposed tariffs and their impact on agricultural products. The major concern raised is the tariffs on soybeans, which China heavily imports from the U.S. However, the discussion highlights that these tariffs have not yet influenced market movements because China has already secured its needed supplies. Consequently, the tariffs have not significantly affected the corn, soybeans, or wheat markets so far.
41:00 - 44:30: Closing Remarks and Acknowledgments In the closing remarks and acknowledgments chapter, the speaker addresses concerns about the financial impact on their business. They clarify that there hasn't been any marketing recently, meaning no direct sales or financial effects have occurred as a result. The speaker underscores that their finances are stable, as represented by 'giant galvanized piggy banks,' emphasizing that there has been no change in revenue. However, they acknowledge the uncertainty of future actions, such as potential contract cancellations by partners like China.
How Trump's Tariffs Are Affecting Our Farm Transcription
00:00 - 00:30 howdy Anna and howdy everybody you might have noticed that I haven't made too many videos lately and there's a few good reasons for that number one because it's winter in Minnesota and most of the time definitely not today but most of the time we're underneath ice and snow and the ground is frozen I don't know 4 to 15 ft deep [Music]
00:30 - 01:00 in other words there's not a whole lot that I can do in the winter time around here in the field I just don't do as much farming in the winter time I don't have livestock so that makes a big difference but it's getting awfully nice out right now this is actually a this is a record high right here we're looking at mid-60s right here a record high for this date according to the weather channel I believe now I don't have anything to back this up but I think some of the frost is starting to come out in some of the areas which is pretty crazy for this time of year for us that
01:00 - 01:30 said they are forecasting for tonight starting at 9:00 tonight which it's 4:00 now so in just a few hours it's supposed to start raining and get much colder throughout the night turn to snow they're forecasting anywhere from like 1 to 16 in of snow depending on what the temperature really does and the good part is it's supposed to come with 50 mph winds all night long so it's not going to be nearly as nice tomorrow morning I think I might unhook this screen cart because that tractor needs
01:30 - 02:00 to go on that planter so I've gotten some requests for an equipment tour or Machinery tour I think I'll do that but later on in the spring when things are cleaned up and a little more organized but anyway nothing nothing for this spring is changing we've got the 410 8rt that is going to be hooked to the planter which is the 1775 uh exact emerge exact right exact emerg planter yes that is the high-speed
02:00 - 02:30 brush belt 10 mph planter same thing same same planter we ran last year that that's the dog noise that's not the tractor doing that where'd she go wait for more dog noise well she didn't Yip but you can tell she would like to come up here maybe another day look I love the dogs I just don't need them I mean I love I love the tractors too so they can stay out there that's where dogs are meant to be
02:30 - 03:00 once this really bad weather passes it's time to get the square body out too I have been getting a lot of questions also about the Tariff situation the trade deal and who I voted for and all of that I could be wrong but I don't believe I've ever actually said who I voted for for president this last round I don't I don't think so I'm not going to get political because most of you do
03:00 - 03:30 not want that but I'm getting people asking so I'm going to explain my thoughts on the Tariff situation and just say that so far the actual effect is not that great probably not as as much as you'd think there's a few things to address [Music] here so the first one and probably the
03:30 - 04:00 biggest is the tariffs that we have now proposed against China China is a major buyer of particularly soybeans from us but as of right now the markets trying to move this thing just an inch the markets haven't responded to anything because China has their needs covered so as far as corn soybeans wheat those tariffs right now haven't made a difference on top of that
04:00 - 04:30 we haven't been marketing lately so we're not selling anything like our financial impact right now to this point is zero there has been no no direct impact to us whatsoever cuz I've got people thinking that all of a sudden we have less money coming in it's really just not how it works my money is in those giant galvanized piggy banks right there and so far no difference that's not to say that China won't cancel some contract but as I as I speak right now
04:30 - 05:00 as I record this China has not cancelled contracts there's been no hit to the market uh it's really just been a non-factor now that could absolutely change and I would guess that it probably [Applause] will the next big issue that could probably have the biggest potential impact on this Farm is the Tariff game that we've decided to play with Canada little bit unexpected uh but but the biggest thing there is going to be at
05:00 - 05:30 least on our farm fertilizer a lot of pot ash comes out of Canada that's what we use to put uh potassium in our soils again there we've got all of our potassium down we've got all our needs in the ground we put it in last fall that uh well that one's going to be soybeans but our fields are fertilized the potash is out there we're not buying any pot as until uh probably whenever we got to put the money down we probably will end up putting some money down late summer early fall and then paying for
05:30 - 06:00 the rest of it after it's applied so potentially by then we'll be paying more for fertilizer uh or it'll all be settled or one really interesting thing that I uh that I learned recently is yes we take a ton of pot as here in the States from Canada but a huge majority of that actually only comes in because it gets on our barges and leaves off the West Coast so they're they're they're sending it here we're importing it into
06:00 - 06:30 here just because that's Canada's easiest most efficient way of of getting it overseas so I mean we could shut that pipeline down for for Canada as well if we really wanted to play dirty and then they don't really have anywhere to go with their pot as or maybe I suppose they they probably have other routes but it's going to be more expensive I don't I don't really know um and I hope it doesn't come to that I I look if I squint my eyes I can see Canada from here I'm not interested in playing those games with my neighbors there's a whole
06:30 - 07:00 bunch of weird games being played some of them Petty some of them not ultimately though one of the big questions I get get asked is why did farmers vote the way they did when they knew you know that this threat was coming you know how do we like it now I'll just speak for myself on this and say that I don't I don't farm and I don't vote to try and get rich in one year for short-term gain uh I do this
07:00 - 07:30 and I vote for what is hopefully long-term success I I'm I'm when I vote I vote for what I think is the best for our country I don't vote based on what I think can make me the most money this year and to be totally honest with you personally I really just didn't feel great about the direction the country was going in the way it was a lot of you are going to disagree with with me and that's fine we can still uh we can still
07:30 - 08:00 Farm together here on YouTube one interesting issue that just came up last night I think it was maybe the night before was the EPA regulations and it sounds like there's a lot of them that are going to be lifted I don't know if ethanol if any of the ethanol regulations are included in that or not I have no idea some of those could certainly affect the markets uh directly affect the markets and and even more so maybe in our area
08:00 - 08:30 because we do predominantly sell our corn to ethanol plants but that doesn't change the corn that we grow it's the same corn that we grow whether we're selling to ethanol plants or an elevator or a feed mill or what have you um on top of that ethanol provides an awful lot of feed to the livestock Growers because there's a lot of the the the uh the plant the minerals the starches uh sorry not the starches the proteins are left over so the dried distiller grains
08:30 - 09:00 or the wet cake those products that are left after ethanol after ethanol creation uh that all gets sold to livestock so it isn't like every bushel that goes towards to the ethanol plant gets used for ethanol and it's actually quite a bit less than that because it still gets used for livestock feed but that is one I'm going to be watching pretty close uh jeez Say It Don't Spray it brother
09:00 - 09:30 uh could potentially have a good effect on our markets maybe later in the year I don't know I've had a few comments from a few guys that seem to think that right now um because of who's in charge and what's going on that we suddenly somehow have less funding in his words their words we have less funding coming into our farm right now that's not how it works uh I don't get like a a bi-weekly subsidy check from the government any subsidy
09:30 - 10:00 checks are inconsistent there are programs that pop up and shut down all the times there are things you qualify for things you don't I mean we could spend an entire day talking about that uh but right now there again as of now nothing no change whatsoever on that um and I have heard there are some programs potentially in the works that are going to help with Market losses that come from the Tariff War uh that is is what happened in what year was that what what
10:00 - 10:30 was that uh 17 18 16 even somewhere in there first time Trump was in office there was a little bit of that sure and that could very well happen again I don't know as of right now no no difference to that from what would not have been coming anyway to be honest with you that's a big part of the reason a lot of the farmers voted the way they did many of them many of us myself included believe that there are way too
10:30 - 11:00 many programs as it is and bunch of you are going to ask me then if I feel that way why do I take that money and I addressed this several years ago and it's a it's a weird thing to address I feel like I've got to be careful about it but ultimately that money goes back to the banks and the landlords that we rent land from and and Machinery purchases that goes back anyway because we're all cash flowing what we can if my neighbors take that money and I don't
11:00 - 11:30 they have more Capital to be able to pay higher rent costs than I do and if I do it that way eventually I will lose the Acres that I rent which would be a massive hit to us and so because you want to you want to compete on a Level Playing Field that's why everybody takes them I hate to use the word competition when it comes to farming I hate it but we are in competition with each other
11:30 - 12:00 when it comes to the land out here and I'm not going to blame that on the landlords they own the asset they're paying taxes on it they've got it there why wouldn't they want the best return on it that they can get anyway to sum up subsidies yes they are a real thing uh but they've gotten to be really inconsistent programs come and go you never know how much you're going to get or not get sometimes it's very very little sometimes it's none sometimes it's stupid some of them are very Justified and uh and serve a good
12:00 - 12:30 purpose but I think we need to take a really hard look at which programs those are and which ones really just don't necessarily need to be a thing at all now this is when I start to get really excited this is absolutely my favorite time of the year right now oh yeah my favorite Planter's hanging on my favorite tractor I'm not going to hook anything up right now other than oh come on got
12:30 - 13:00 it just lock the twoo in here and let the hoses in just going to get it in the heated shed so I can hook things up and start looking at stuff if I feel like it during this upcoming blizzard what do you smell well now I've got this out just
13:00 - 13:30 need to make room for it in this one come on needs fuel yeah this is that one if you've been watching you know that sometimes it does this and sometimes it doesn't so I just use a little bit of I don't know diesel in a gas form here like a kit out a milk pil there we go I don't recommend using ether to start semi- trucks
13:30 - 14:00 do as I say not as I do that kind of thing also I'm clearly not a mechanic not even close I don't really do anything that I do o I forgot I had this one truck out of the way we uh didn't use these much this winter little bit and December but it sounds like we're going
14:00 - 14:30 to be using them again in about 2 weeks here we're going to be moving a whole bunch of loads out of here may as well get these lawn ornaments off the lawn yeah it's supposed to snow but the odds of it being good riding weather got to be right around zero [Music]
14:30 - 15:00 I have Ambitions of getting a couple 12T pallet racks here and putting the snowmobiles up top and out of the way that's one of those projects I just haven't gotten to yet not farming just moving things but hey we're getting close to farming oh I killed it
15:00 - 15:30 need both hands see you got to run that go old school well I didn't go very far but that was fun finally we'll get this thing moved into the shed
15:30 - 16:00 would you look at that Planter's back in the main shop that's pretty neat what are you excited about out there you're goofy just wanted that moved over cuz I want to put my pickup in that spot over there what do I do with my sweatshirt it'll pop up somewhere sometime probably okay now the last and
16:00 - 16:30 final one piece of information regarding the current governmental situation that is affecting me personally not necessarily the farm but me remember this grain dryer we put up last fall last summer I purchased this uh and applied for a government grant that was to cover cover a certain
16:30 - 17:00 percentage of the project it was about a year that it took me of filling out paperwork a lot of it being really repetitive I know that's hard to believe the government programs being inefficient like that but anyway I filled out a lot of paperwork had to work with the contractors had to put together an awful lot of information to be able to apply for that Grant or get that Grant to go through it was an energy grant that helps Farmers purchase things on the Farms that ultimately save
17:00 - 17:30 energy they're more efficient which this dryer is much more efficient than our old dryer I qualified for that Grant was promised the money the funding was cleared for the funding actually in I think it was in January maybe late December maybe even a little bit before that anyway just before I got my hands on the funding the new Administration locked everything which means that I owe a lot of money on that dryer right now
17:30 - 18:00 that I'm paying 8% interest on uh that I did not plan on carrying for this long now I'm fine it's going to be fine but it would be nice to not have to pay 8% interest on the chunk of that project that I was qualified for that I have been granted funding for to cover a large percentage of that project that alone that project right there cost me well north of 300 $100,000 and I really only made that purchase
18:00 - 18:30 because I was planning on this uh this government grant this funding but again to reiterate um I didn't vote for short-term profitability and yeah it's disappointing I would like to get that money right now I still believe I will get that if I don't I'll be fine I didn't make the financial decision that was going to ruin me based on you know the hope of getting a government project or government grant given to me so I'm
18:30 - 19:00 fine either way but it is affecting me and I'm going to hike my skirt up and take it like a man and if they say I don't get the funding then I don't get the funding that'd be pretty disappointing what could I do about it nothing I guess I'm going to go this way actually to get my pickup to put it in the shed so yeah that's the one thing that is that that sucks right now that I'm paying interest on a big chunk of money from a grant that I was promised and has already been
19:00 - 19:30 approved what do you suppose that kid's up to now did just going to take the shortcut she is so much smarter she knows they're headed back there and it's twice as far to go that way well I thank you guys all for watching I hope I didn't upset too many of you I tried to keep it as non-political as possible but still address some of those questions um just a reminder we still have uh free calendars right now on the farm Focus website or my website that's the only place you can get our actual merchandise
19:30 - 20:00 the only place you can get a calendar if you go there and you put enough stuff in your cart that it hits $40 it's automatically going to add a calendar to your order those are pictures in that calendar that I've taken on the farm here over the last year we got all kinds of good stuff over there that's anything in the store whether it's mugs caps sweatshirts t-shirts uh can coozies you name it go check it out you know I almost forgot um we actually went out recently to Denver for the commodity
20:00 - 20:30 classic out there really big farm show and visited uh one of the evenings an fbn Warehouse that is out in I think it was Brighton Colorado not far from the heart of Denver massive Warehouse out there where they store a ton of chemicals uh store and distribute kind of like a like a hub it comes in it goes out uh gets handled from there anyway Becky and I went and visited there here's the footage enjoy just a little bit of bonus stuff Shaka Shaka Shaka
20:30 - 21:00 Shaka and action where are we today well why don't you guys say we're in uh Brighton Colorado just past the uh Denver airport in one of fbn's primary performance centers and this is fbn's largest Center in North America yeah you could get into a debate with our Canadian friends whether this one or the Saskatoon building or larger um I think this one is slightly larger but we can fit a little more product into this Saskatoon building so depends on your perspective this is one of three buildings in the US
21:00 - 21:30 in Saskatoon and Canada which are you know these are the mother ships for the network we call them primary fulfillment centers they're the hubs in our Hub and spoke Network so they're big we bring all of our inventory in here this is where it lands and then we we we depending on the time of year we either send it direct to farm uh before the season starts or during the year we're going to partiel this out we're going to send what we need to send to mina we're going to send what we need to send to Montana to Kansas a little bit at a time and we can respond really quickly so if
21:30 - 22:00 you're in uh if you're up in Great Falls Montana pretty remote it's about 1300 mi from here and there's a bug problem this year there's going to be the insecticide that everybody else is put in that market as maybe we'll sell it and then there's going to be us responding to those real-time signals moving it from here within a day or two and making sure whatever is needed up there is moved up there we have one building for uh materials that can be dangerous if there's a spill um and if if if they they can be inhaled they're dangerous so that room has a very high rate of air
22:00 - 22:30 exchange and then we have another room that will pass down here which has a enhanced fire supression this building is A4 mile long okay so how much does one of these things cover 1,100 Acres okay at a court break at a qut per acre at standard rate what most people use this is Austin by the way Austin Roy Lance tell them where they can follow you H royland spray just nice and simple on everything Instagram Tik Tok all all people we're going to be
22:30 - 23:00 putting about a million liters of farm of of product not just gate but a million liters of product on Farm every day from from about mid March to Mid April in across North America yeah out of just this facility no out out of our entire network I find that really interesting so these guys were just talking about the the barcodes here on the totes with all the totes they have in this massive building and how each tote has its own code so explain that again how each so every single time you
23:00 - 23:30 go on to the fbn website and you look for any product and it says this product can get to your farm within one day two days 3 days right it's it's tapping our whole system it's looking at every single product we have in the network knows every truck we're going to be sending that's scheduled and it's telling you when it can get it to your firm based on our scheduling our inventory and if we can get it onto a truck so we want to have the fastest possible delivery and also the most efficient truck routes uh as well that allows us to theow this is the fire here you guys
23:30 - 24:00 want to get a shot of you getting stuck in the fire room as the doors close yes I think we probably should this will drop down and seal all right so we have to have a means of containment okay fire department requires that okay so you'll notice different sealing in this room right increased fire suppression so so if if if the fire alarm were to go off and nobody walk through here when this goes off should someone yell fire fire
24:00 - 24:30 and that that puts the fire are you guys okay over [Music] there so this is a spill containment which which would come down in the case of a fire man this place is massive I mean we can't even see half of it over here yet here at the front so that when they have to pick a bunch of different product for somebody's order
24:30 - 25:00 it's all here in the front as you go back you can see the fully shrink WB pallets and then they'll move them up here so this is broke down yep the whole way along here you'll see all those broken down and it's just for efficiency that's anything Farmers first Willowwood or GCS those are all fbn brands in this building the the chemicals in here hey I'm taking a video oh oh I'm sorry at it that's what you're think about it yeah is that the the chemicals in this
25:00 - 25:30 building Fun Way To Think about in this building you'd be covering roughly 2 and half% of the Corn if you just if this were all going to Corin basically in this one building yeah this one building it's not all going to cor but if it was yeah that's what's in here we've done about 500 shipments over the last few weeks we'll do probably 6 or 700 over next few and night like I said then it really gets going what did you call this room the H4 room H4 room so this is where corros I or toxic materials to
25:30 - 26:00 okay so when it's ventilating and it's got the spill control so we have the spill control arm behind us again so are there there's obviously certain products that will all get stored in here correct by required to be stored in here okay you going to hop in my basket yeah are we going to Aspen I was going to hop in there but that that basket's not built for me oh yeah that's the that's the real you think there's a bird the bik that's the row that's the row of
26:00 - 26:30 inhabit P so this is the inhabit PE that Matt and I tested on our farm last year and saw I mean was it three three and a half bushels on average on the whole average of the quarter and I think you had five different strips most of the people I had doing this had two or three strips y you went above and beyond and had five strips you had no treatment 1034 o zinc against it you had it up on some lighter sander ground going up the hill Y and you had some really kind of
26:30 - 27:00 sour ground down at the bottom on the south end of that quarter right Al together it was 3.3 Bush better than running against 1034 R zinc down in that sour High alkalide Ground which is we experience inhabit P performing about equal in neutral to low PHS but in high PHS it outperforms competitive stuff and in that piece of ground it did seven Bush better in it yeah it's so the higher the pH in the soil yep the the
27:00 - 27:30 more the more dramatic we saw the advantage on thisal results if you're you know equal pH if you're neutral pH or low PH but high pH is where we star to see this pull apart from other starter fertiliz for so and so we ordered actually a tote of this to do about half of our corn acres for this year so in a week two weeks here we'll be getting a shuttle of this in on our farm and uh and using that as starter fertilizer on about half of our corn Acres of course we're going to pick
27:30 - 28:00 probably I mean it would make sense to pick the highest pH fields which is kind of an unusual thing but in our area we have a lot of really really high pH soils that's where that stuff really shines it helps to make it it helps make the phosphorus available so it's not necessarily A phosphorus product it helps to make the phosphorus available within the soil which we definitely saw on our trials from a year ago for those wondering I didn't drive to Denver and do my hair all schnazzy to visit an fbn Warehouse
28:00 - 28:30 we're out here for the commodity classic anyway so big trade show uh one of my favorite trade shows to hit every year Becky and I were there today and uh we're going to be there tomorrow as well which is over by the time you see this but that's why we're that's why we're out here as long as we're in the Denver area we wanted to check this place out well they weren't lying hope you enjoyed your trip to Denver they were correct today's is a little bit different than yesterday I want to thank
28:30 - 29:00 fbn again for their continued support make sure you check them out they have uh transparent list pricing on things like seed chemical they've got financing options all kinds of things over on fbn.com and it's free to be a member oh they've got digital Insight stuff that's how they originally started all kinds of really cool stuff that will look at your soil types your seed what you're doing on your farm and take that aggregated data Anonymous data and show you what works best check them out over at fbn.com are your paws cold
29:00 - 29:30 Digi yeah I'm going to go in the house where it's warm [Music]