Incidentally, a farm like this, when you see this, let me back off here a little bit. When you see something that's planted like this, you don't see canals. You don't see berms you don't see rows, it's just a flat field. And it's very soft. The dirt is very pliable, very, very plantable. This is where they get enough rainfall.
This is adequate rainfall kind of planting. They don't have to worry about bringing water in the water's coming right from up over above in the sky. And then they can just plant these these flat fields. Now you might see if you can make this out. They do have rows and ridges in there because they've used a small tractor to go in there and sort of like dig it all up. And of course they get plenty.
Having a having buff and having cows around. They have plenty of animals. manure and compost to put in there. So when they bring tractors over there and dig it up like that, then they dig it under at the same time and get their soil neutral fine. So again Normally, if you are in an arid region where you need irrigation, you're not going to be doing a generally this kind of planting. Because you're going to need to get water to those crops you're you're generally going to either see closed cells is in the lead donkey method or you're going to see row farming or some kind of way to bring the water in.
And sometimes that's going to be done with hoses. If you have enough water temps in an area, and but most farms around the world most times it's going to be coming in via canal being being fed in from the local mountains. Through the law of the municipal water supply. It runs along in Canada. And then those canals are funneled off into each property. And then again in inside each property they will funnel off the canals into more canals and then you will see them feeding, feeding these these plots.
Okay, on to the next