First Soybean Post-Application - HAGIE Sprayer

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2020
  • We spot Andrew in the field on Sunday and notice a HAGIE sprayer with independent nozzles behind him so we go out and check it out!
    More on Dicamba: www.npr.org/2020/06/09/872710...
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    How Farms Work by Ryan Kuster is a CZcams channel based in rural Potosi, Wisconsin.
    Our mission is to teach those who didn't grow up on a farm what the farming life is like.
    These videos show the Kuster family working together raising cattle and crops. We believe everyone who wants to know more about farming should be able to share the farming experience with us and we look to educate the world on many essential agriculture topics.
    How Farms Work takes place on ~1,100 acres with around 75-200 cattle at any given time. Four John Deere tractors are currently used on the farm, which are a 4020, 4640, 7600, and 8235R.

Komentáře • 111

  • @gregkortbein5108
    @gregkortbein5108 Před 4 lety +2

    Andrew does an excellent job for you guys. You are lucky to have him. The crops look good.

  • @marshallkrabs3348
    @marshallkrabs3348 Před 4 lety +2

    Awesome video!! It's fun to follow the farm through out the year.

  • @AirzGamingTTV
    @AirzGamingTTV Před 4 lety +1

    Cant tell you how much better your video looks without all the fisheye!! Love your content.

  • @caj8968
    @caj8968 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for mentioning the date, have a nice day!

  • @brittblanton8342
    @brittblanton8342 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for the video Ryan awesome drone shots, beans and corn look great 👍

  • @ginggur17
    @ginggur17 Před 4 lety +6

    Amazing drone flying Ryan. That’s a hell of a breed width sprayer.

  • @jacksak
    @jacksak Před 4 lety +3

    It's interesting to see how close the sprayer tires come to the bean plant rows without damage. Thanks for the video.

  • @danfinley3690
    @danfinley3690 Před 4 lety

    Always love the drone footage good stuff

  • @rickokemp1244
    @rickokemp1244 Před 4 lety +1

    I don't know if I'm more impressed with your drone flying skills or the Hagie driver! Both were amazing! Love it! Great video.

    • @605outdoors3
      @605outdoors3 Před 4 lety

      Its autopilot, most equipment is equipped with it, the operator only needs to turn and pay atte

    • @andytuck13
      @andytuck13 Před 4 lety

      So. DakOutdoors didn’t use autosteer here

  • @clinthochrein888
    @clinthochrein888 Před 4 lety +1

    Pretty neat sprayer with the indipendent nozzles. I can’t remember the countless times my older brother an I would race our farm dog years ago with the four wheeler.

  • @farmshoffman8475
    @farmshoffman8475 Před 4 lety

    Great awesome video, like that sprayer , real wide boom , I know when the sprayer comes to do ours it’s a big case sprayer , doesn’t take him long

  • @kevinwillis9126
    @kevinwillis9126 Před 4 lety

    Great vid Ryan thanks..

  • @SimonKL11
    @SimonKL11 Před 4 lety +3

    Over here, it was "knee high by harvest time" in 2018.
    Great video👍

  • @marshellonadamus4569
    @marshellonadamus4569 Před 4 lety

    Love your videos ❤️

  • @miguelangeljosepujol9594

    Excellent birth and condition of corn, soybeans and waterways, Greetings from Argentina.

  • @tylerbebes6182
    @tylerbebes6182 Před 4 lety

    Hi Ryan hope I have great day and keep up work

  • @justincase2830
    @justincase2830 Před 4 lety

    Your crops look good.

  • @MatthewHoag77
    @MatthewHoag77 Před 4 lety +11

    Andrew does a great job keeping your fields looking good, doesn't he? I suppose there's a little extra motivation because, unlike most farmers' crops, yours are subject to being video recorded several times during the growing season. Leave it to government to mess with things at the absolute most inopportune time. Thanks for the video.

    • @andytuck13
      @andytuck13 Před 4 lety +12

      You tube or no you tube I hold myself to a pretty high standard for the fields I help guys with. I figure each and every field is a representation of my abilities as an agronomist and I definitely don’t want anything I deal with looking subpar! I’m fortunate to have some pretty great customers.

    • @MatthewHoag77
      @MatthewHoag77 Před 4 lety

      @@andytuck13 That you are.

  • @bubballama
    @bubballama Před 4 lety

    @HagieMfgCo taking care of business. Awesome drone shots. That's some quality flying.

    • @thomasrouse3826
      @thomasrouse3826 Před 4 lety

      Hagie was purchased by John Deere last year or the year before.

    • @bubballama
      @bubballama Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah, year before. I have family that works for Hagie, hence why I tagged their CZcams page. The sprayers are still made by Hagie in Iowa.

  • @totojoaquim6252
    @totojoaquim6252 Před 4 lety

    Good video

  • @jaimecoronado2355
    @jaimecoronado2355 Před 4 lety +2

    That's one fast dog!

  • @gregmercer5171
    @gregmercer5171 Před 4 lety +3

    GR88T shots with the drone..

  • @WiedemannPhotography
    @WiedemannPhotography Před 4 lety

    I bet you were not expecting that sprayer to stop when flying your drone next to the tire. That looked like a close one. :)

  • @waterskiingfool
    @waterskiingfool Před 4 lety

    How fast can rocket run? Good to see Andrew invested in the fields again

  • @tomsibbick9770
    @tomsibbick9770 Před 4 lety +1

    Hi there what kind of corn and beans are you growing this year? our daughter is going trucking and you going be in the field longer in the Harvest time. 🚜🚜🚜🚛🍵😎

  • @jacksak
    @jacksak Před 4 lety

    I didn't see your Dicamba link but read about the federal court ruling versus the EPA ruling. It's not clear to me (at June 17) whether or not it can be sprayed now and in what states and if already purchased product can still be used. Ryan, what's your take on this now?

    • @matt56849
      @matt56849 Před 4 lety

      The EPA said any stock purchased before June 3rd, I believe, can be used.

  • @FarmallFanatic
    @FarmallFanatic Před 4 lety +4

    Im guessing the deer are pounding those beans?

  • @jorelo4313
    @jorelo4313 Před 4 lety

    Rocket rocketing through corn

  • @kennyirving4538
    @kennyirving4538 Před 4 lety

    What’s your thoughts on grain vacuums?

  • @mrbilky
    @mrbilky Před 4 lety

    Curious does your weed germination and pressure slowly diminish over the years on any one piece of ground? I mean where do they come from after years of spraying and good cultivation practices do they really blow in on the wind?

    • @larrybe2900
      @larrybe2900 Před 4 lety

      birds help

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 4 lety

      Some seeds can remain viable in the soil for decades or more... and one weed can produce THOUSANDS to MILLIONS of seed, so it doesn't take much! Plus weed seeds have various ingenious dispersal methods, from wind to water to animals and insects, etc... Later! OL J R :)

  • @frankeem3820
    @frankeem3820 Před 4 lety

    How do you respond to people who reject the use of all chemicals and GMO seedstock?

    • @MatthewHoag77
      @MatthewHoag77 Před 4 lety +2

      Ask them if they would use insulin if they were diagnosed with any form of diabetes. It's the same process.

  • @tebfarms939
    @tebfarms939 Před 4 lety

    You have electric drives on your planter?

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 4 lety

      Not electric drives I don't think but they do have independent row shutoffs... Later! OL J R :)

  • @ivanvankeulen5214
    @ivanvankeulen5214 Před 4 lety +1

    How fast does Rocket go? Our dog almost does 30MpH

    • @armadillerff
      @armadillerff Před 4 lety

      Ivan Van Keulen It’d be wild if he could ever get someone to run radar on Rocket. He is wicked fast!

    • @ivanvankeulen5214
      @ivanvankeulen5214 Před 4 lety +1

      Armadiller Firefighter we we ride in the tractor and we go 43Km/H (26MpH) he goes faster than us

  • @johnperry5102
    @johnperry5102 Před 4 lety +3

    how does that spray not damage your corn and been plants, it must have some effect

    • @Blazer02LS
      @Blazer02LS Před 4 lety +2

      Round-up ready seeds are genetically designed so that they are not harmed when using glyphosate on them.

  • @tomnugent845
    @tomnugent845 Před 4 lety +2

    Great vid for non-farmers.

  • @augustreil
    @augustreil Před 4 lety +2

    The sprayer looks gigantic until you see it in the aerial shots, then not so much !

    • @shyfarmboya
      @shyfarmboya Před 4 lety +2

      ? Guessing 120 foot boom. So 4 times as wide as their planter.

    • @MatthewHoag77
      @MatthewHoag77 Před 4 lety

      When you see it in person, it looks pretty darn big.

  • @user-jh7uf8sr1w
    @user-jh7uf8sr1w Před 4 lety

    Which chemical are used in sprey love from india 🙏❤️

    • @andytuck13
      @andytuck13 Před 4 lety

      s Anjana we used Xtendimax, Roundup Powermax, and Outlook herbicides in this field

  • @jordanschneider6505
    @jordanschneider6505 Před 4 lety

    Hi ryan

  • @shawnjames6714
    @shawnjames6714 Před 4 lety

    Wow, Rocket can haul ass haha

  • @TheMadSentinel
    @TheMadSentinel Před 4 lety +1

    It scares me a little bit that I understand and parse fake Star Trek technobabble so much more clearly than I can follow Andrew's Agrinese... "So we're gonna apply the Floblastinate to clear the rows and make sure we can make way for the second pass of that Kumqwateryn product we talked about back in the spring. That's gonna get us the yields we're looking for so we can come back later in the summer with the OmNomNomitrex to put these plants in a position to do what we're hoping for from them..."

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 4 lety

      Start reading and maybe hang out with a local farmer and lend and hand and ask questions, and it'll all start to make sense. All of it serves a purpose I assure you... :) Farmers know all this stuff "by heart" from doing it and being around it for a lifetime, but yeah the 'technicalese" can be a little hard to follow... agronomists are very well educated and "use the big words" farmers put it much more simply.... Later! OL J R :)

  • @danlowery3235
    @danlowery3235 Před 4 lety +8

    All these court rulings I guess we live in the United States of California!

  • @zareb04
    @zareb04 Před 4 lety

    So much chemicals. How is the biodiversity of the dirt? Roundup is banded from EU.
    Another question. In the EU a part of the green deal is the concept of farm to fork. That puts an end tot monoculture farms. When the left has taken over I think you are also driven to that theme. What are your views on that. Greetings from the Netherlands

    • @burkhardt7372
      @burkhardt7372 Před 4 lety +1

      Too big of the voting block in the states needed to win anything. They won't go after a piggy bank as big as the corporate farmers are.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 4 lety

      Everybody, particularly the Europeans, like to compare European agriculture to US agriculture, when there is really NO comparison beyond a surface appearance. Our land and climate is different, cropping mixes and field sizes and machinery and our agronomic systems are COMPLETELY different, and our regulations and purchasing/sales systems are different. I'm not necessarily saying one is better than the other (though I definitely have my opinion on that point as I'm sure everyone does, and I know *I* wouldn't bother farming if I were forced to do things "the European way" with the government looking over my shoulder and telling me everything I could and couldn't do all the time. Europeans are okay with that from what I've seen... some of the things I hear they have to do just make me cringe, and I like I said, I personally would QUIT before dealing with all that-- and I think probably MOST US farmers feel much the same way. If Europe and the Europeans want to do things a certain way, and it WORKS FOR THEM, GOOD FOR THEM, and they certainly have every right to do it that way and embrace and enjoy it. BUT I DON'T LIVE IN EUROPE, NOR DO IT WANT TO. We farm people in the United States left Europe (largely) because OUR ANCESTORS DIDN'T LIKE IT THERE, didn't like king and country and oppressive gubmints sticking their noses into everything we did and dictating our lives to us... SO WE LEFT AND WENT ELSEWHERE! We certainly don't want it that way NOW. Honestly, we have too much "big gubmint" sticking their fat noses into our business and sticking their hands in our wallets AS IT IS, we don't want OR NEED more! Now we have the uneducated citiots and activists and other nutjobs trying to tell us how to do our jobs, when they lack even BASIC understanding of WHY THINGS ARE DONE AS THEY ARE... we didn't just wake up one morning and say "lets do it this way!" even if it was a "bad idea" or whatever... things happen FOR A REASON. Things are done the way they're done FOR A REASON, and just because someone is ignorant of what those reasons are, doesn't mean they don't exist or aren't VALID reasons! Now we can talk about IMPROVING things, about CHANGING things for various reasons, and that's fine-- that's healthy and that's PROGRESS, but we see more and more "kneejerk" overreaction to placate uneducated uninformed illogical FOOLS within and outside gubmint all the time... And, at the end of the day, farmers ARE doing it to make (or sustain) their living and their heritage on the land. Nobody will do ANYTHING when they have NO CHANCE of making money at it... might as well quit when it comes to that, and do something else.
      What I say is, let Europe do it the European way, and more power to you, but let US do it OUR WAY as well... Later! OL J R :)

  • @joesanders652
    @joesanders652 Před 4 lety

    Am i the only one that was hoping rocket would come to the camera?

  • @nikphoenix
    @nikphoenix Před 4 lety +1

    Please put more sounds of the equipment running on drone shots vs music.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 4 lety

      Drones don't pick up sounds worth a rip, and nobody wants to listen to a hive of angry hornets buzzing (drone props) for ten minutes during a video.
      On ride alongs, I TOTALLY agree with you... I CAN'T STAND farming channels that cover up the natural sound of the machinery with LOUD BLARING stupid "new country" crap music, loud obnoxious rock-n-roll or heavy metal or whatever type of music THE CREATOR thinks is "super cool" and which is just friggin' ANNOYING... everybody's taste in music is different and I think Ryan does a good job in matching the mood and tempo of his videos with good, non-specific music that just supports that mood and tempo without being too repetitive or obnoxious... Most of those farm channels with loud obnoxious and usually stupid "new country" crap blaring with some idiot wailing about his "John Deere tractors" and corn and whiskey and his dog and pickup truck and all that crap magic buzzwords that these idiots use in new country just to sell records... (BAH! I HATE NEW COUNTRY, gimme Johnny Cash and Merle Haggard and Waylon and Willie ANY DAY!!) I usually either just quit watching those videos or watch them on friggin MUTE so I don't have to listen to that UTTER CRAP!!! Later! OL J R :)

  • @tiredoldmechanic1791
    @tiredoldmechanic1791 Před 4 lety

    Too many farmers are only concerned about their own crops and not what the products they're using do to things that others are growing.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 4 lety

      To a certain degree this is true. It's also true that the companies came out with the seed while the EPA was still foot-dragging on registering the new dicamba formulations that were designed to go hand-in-hand with the seed technology to allow SAFER dicamba applications on soybeans WITHOUT destroying their neighbor's crops planted to NON-dicamba tolerant soybean varieties or other sensitive crops. IMHO the EPA should NOT have allowed the companies to sell dicamba-tolerant seed with NO LEGAL "labelled" product to spray on those acres... they should have banned the sale of the seed before the labelled chemicals to be applied to them were registered and greenlighted for use. Of course the seed companies wanted to start cashing in on their huge biotech investment as soon as possible, and "anticipated" the approval and release dates and thus began producing commercial quantities of seed for general sale to farmers "at the earliest possible date" and when the EPA approval process for the chemicals dragged on, they were stuck with TONS of seed in the warehouse designed to be sprayed with dicamba, but no APPROVED and registered chemical formulations to apply on them, effectively rendering the trait "worthless". Not wanting to anger the companies, EPA and USDA said nothing and allowed them to sell the seed anyway. Farmers, having bought the seed and knowing the trait was in it, started spraying REGULAR dicamba formulations currently on the market, which are "hotter" (more volatile and prone to vapor drift) and ended up roasting a lot of their neighbor's crops. Now, I'm not excusing that bad behavior, and IMHO the state Ag Departments and Attorneys General SHOULD have filed criminal charges on farmers who WILLFULLY and ILLEGALLY sprayed non-approved formulations of dicamba on their soybeans and fried neighboring crops, and as well as the criminal penalties for such, the farmers SHOULD have been sued for damaged and forced to pay the full amount of the damage inflicted on neighboring crops by their irresponsible and illegal behavior. There needs to be ACCOUNTABILITY and RESPONSIBILITY required of those who tried to increase their profit by taking "the easy way" no matter how illegal it might be, and were willfully uncaring about the consequences. Therefore, let them pay the FULL consequences. BUT we also need to realize that the companies involved were also guilty, and to a lesser extent EPA and the gubmint, in allowing them to sell a product that was designed to be part of a SYSTEM of seed traits and approved chemical formulations, without all parts of said system being in place... it presented an ATTRACTIVE NUISANCE in that farmers could readily get the seed, in fact some had prepaid for it a year in advance or had been on a waiting list for it to come out for a year or more before that... And then received the product with the instructions "not to use it". It's like handing kids a pile of presents on Christmas morning and telling them they can't open them til Easter... NOT GONNA HAPPEN! It's a recognized tenet of law that IF you have an "attractive nuisance" on your property, like a pond or something that people might be 'drawn to' that you can be held legally accountable if something bad happens, even through "no fault of your own' and even if they are acting illegally, should they be injured or killed or suffer damages related to that "attractive nuisance". The law varies but basically stipulates you must either REMOVE said attractive nuisance OR take reasonable and prudent mitigating steps to prevent injuries or death or loss due to its presence, to absolve yourself of responsibility for their actions. It would have been "reasonable and prudent" for the companies to KEEP THE SEED IN THE WAREHOUSE and NOT SELL IT **UNTIL** the EPA approvals were in place and the chemical formulations designed to be applied to it were also ready for sale and use by the farmers... in this the companies fell prey to greed and neglected their responsibility to sell a product that was indeed READY FOR SALE AND INTENDED USE, and the gubmint neglected their responsibility to either perform the necessary testing and rule-writing within the prescribed testing period to get the products labeled and released, or impose their authority to prevent sale of the seed until the chemicals to be applied to it were also ready to market with it. In short, there's plenty of blame to go around...
      Now with the rush to "ban pesticides" gaining steam and all the bad publicity on glyphosate and now dicamba, and previous bad blood over GMO's and their poor perception in the public, along with messes like the Starlink corn mess of a decade or two ago, well, this just gives MORE ammunition to those who need it least and intend the most harm... Company and a few farmer's greed is going to cause one h3ll of a mess that ALL farmers using the products are gonna end up having to pay for in the end... Later! OL J R :)

  • @jonathanpetersen2312
    @jonathanpetersen2312 Před 4 lety +4

    I am farmer in Nebraska that has been hurt by dicamba drift from neighbors who have no respect for liberty beans and hurt our yields. I hope court takes away from guy's who use it. Dicamba last year curled the pods on beans and yielded 5- 15 bushel as you got quarter mile in field they yielded 50 on north end of field yielded 70-75 bushel.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 4 lety

      Sue for damages... or the affected farmers need to get together with their state attorney general and demand recompense from the violators... class action suit or the AG bringing charges against them... I think the "mavericks" who were KNOWINGLY and INTENTIONALLY spraying illegally using non-approved, off-label applications of dicamba formulations SHOULD be held accountable to the full extent of the law... Ya know violating an EPA chemical label's restrictions IS a FEDERAL OFFENSE... I don't see why the USDA, EPA, or the US Attorney General hasn't gone after these guys myself... and WHY they ever allowed the companies to sell the seed KNOWING there were NO LEGALLY LABELED DICAMBA FORMULATIONS ready to be sold to be sprayed on those acres, IMHO they should go whomever in gubmint and companies that ALLOWED that to happen in the first place... Shouldn't have been allowed to sell the seed containing the trait WITHOUT the chemical that legally allowed the trait to work "as intended on the label". Just TOTAL IRRESPONSIBILITY all the way around, gubmint, companies, and greedy jerks who sprayed regular dicamba and damaged others crops. Later! OL J R :)

  • @craighinshaw2437
    @craighinshaw2437 Před 4 lety +3

    Dicamda cant be sold in the us, the us court said they mislead the government on the dift and damage issue , cant be used next year

    • @wyatthornback5910
      @wyatthornback5910 Před 4 lety

      Craig Hinshaw dicamba not dicamda

    • @craighinshaw2437
      @craighinshaw2437 Před 4 lety +1

      @@wyatthornback5910 sorry. Im a product of public education system

    • @Blazer02LS
      @Blazer02LS Před 4 lety +2

      Untrue. They only vacated three forms of it. Tavium can still be sold and used. It will also be interesting given the ninth circuses courts status as the most overturned federal court in the country, to see if the ruling lasts.

  • @benny8300
    @benny8300 Před 4 lety

    Buy a self propelled sprayer . Save on money

    • @darkrevenger04
      @darkrevenger04 Před 4 lety +1

      Probably not enough acres to justify owning one

    • @hturbo1007
      @hturbo1007 Před 4 lety

      @Acer Acres you're right, a trailing sprayer like OLF has would be perfect for there operation.

  • @Miguellodu
    @Miguellodu Před 4 lety +1

    the dog runs more than the motorcycle.

  • @ricklenaers4411
    @ricklenaers4411 Před 4 lety

    How can you spray round up because it stops the photosynthese of all plants?
    Or do u use GMO corn?

    • @andytuck13
      @andytuck13 Před 4 lety

      Rick Lenaers 98% of the corn in our area is glyphosate tolerant as well as rootworm and corn borer resistant

    • @ricklenaers4411
      @ricklenaers4411 Před 4 lety

      @@andytuck13 i whish we were alowed to use that

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 4 lety

      Glyphosate DOES NOT 'stop the photosynthesis of all plants"... Maybe actually read what it DOES do and what it DOES NOT. Glyphosate inhibits the production of a certain chemical pathway found only in plants that produces essential amino acids and stuff used by the plants in normal growth and respiration, a pathway not found in mammals and higher organisms. Once the chemical inhibits production of these essential compounds within the target weed, the plant yellows and ceases growth and begins to die within days. Glyphosate is rapidly inactivated in the soil and VERY quickly and strongly binds to soil particles, which is why it has virtually ZERO soil activity and does not readily leach from soil. Not all plants are susceptible, mainly just grasses and some common broadleaf weeds in major crops. Most woody and viney plants are fairly to totally immune to the stuff.
      Yes, GMO corn has a specific gene spliced into the corn's DNA to allow it to survive being sprayed with Roundup, as do all other Roundup Ready crops. There are a number of genes that allow this, some are more efficient and do a better job than others, hence why Roundup Ready 1 trait has almost totally been supplanted by the Roundup Ready 2 trait, and others...
      Later! OL J R :)

  • @larrydorsz4647
    @larrydorsz4647 Před 4 lety +16

    California blows, I know I live here.

    • @0xFF48
      @0xFF48 Před 4 lety +2

      You do realize that Arkansas and Missouri banned it in 2017 too right?

    • @suicidaljell
      @suicidaljell Před 4 lety

      @@0xFF48 probably not doeant fit the narrative

  • @jonathanpetersen2312
    @jonathanpetersen2312 Před 4 lety +1

    One reason why farmers buy dicamba beans is protect them self from damage. Which is not right forces market share to one company. This affects my bottom line. I hope with court decision it will make easier to sue farmers who use it.

    • @andytuck13
      @andytuck13 Před 4 lety

      Jonathan Petersen I work with many growers and not one of them buys dicamba tolerant beans to protect their fields from chemical movement. Dicamba is the most effective technology on emerged, resistant weeds and allows growers to have multiple modes of action to minimize additional resistance. When used properly and according to label there are very few issues if any. In fact dicamba is labeled for corn with almost no restrictions, and those applications cause more issues in our area than bean applications.

    • @jonathanpetersen2312
      @jonathanpetersen2312 Před 4 lety

      @@andytuck13 I think guy's who use dicamba should have go jail when hurt your neighbors yield. Because they think buy there way out. This year again we have cupped beans guys used in high winds high humidity which not suppose to do.

    • @andytuck13
      @andytuck13 Před 4 lety +1

      Jonathan Petersen cupped beans don’t always relate to yield loss and it sounds like the problem is an applicator issue not a product issue. Don’t throw all farmers and applicators under the bus with a few idiots. Use your yield monitor to determine the extent of the problem and resolve the issue in a civil manner. Would you rather have a weed mess and have resistant weeds blowing from his field into yours? We are all in this together.