And then it transfers that heat to our ovens and dryers. And when he got involved with the strand woven Eucalyptus, then he brought the project smarter to us because that was a forestry grant in Tasmania. So that’s just arrived from the fabricator, but we haven’t got to put it into play yet. You’re in Kentucky, so you’re in hemp country right there. Greg Wilson:You’ve seen a picture of a square bale of hay when you stack a bunch of Legos together? And so our sales turned off, our factory was shut down for six weeks. Greg Wilson:No, it was not the Chinese government deemed the bamboo patents to be a monopoly in 2009, 2010. Again, head to bffhemp.com, check out their whole line of CBD oils, including their latest number six, which combines the benefit of CBD with a concentrated amount of CBN that’s going to help you get to sleep. It is also a self-sustainable and renewable plant that is easy to grow and quick to produce. Plus Kentucky is not an expensive place to live. But before we get into that, I want to say thanks to our partner, Blue Forest Farms. Greg Wilson:It is harder than hickory, has the same density of Brazilian cherry, and it is made in the USA in four months. But the maillard effect is like the browning of gravy. Greg Wilson:And then you also have the population that grew up in the ’60s that are on to their forever home, and that are looking for nice things rather than the cheap vinyl or cheap tile that goes into their place. And we send customers their way, and we allow all the different people working on it to tell each other how it works, and to avoid a bunch of those costly mistakes that end up getting people frustrated. And you can find more information about their farm, the genetics, and how their extraction process works over at blueforestfarms.com and then head over to bffhemp.com and check out and buy their products. But I set up a nanotech lab there that would take technologies we’ve developed in the laboratory, and then try to commercialize them in China where I was at. I know, coming from our show where we do hemp education, we can get lost in the cheerleader aspect so much so that it’s easy to be like, “No, those guys are wrong. Is it done? Where’s it start? And so now, it came back to us, we got to cut the wood into the usable sizes for the manufacturers. So tell me about the process. Watch the “Stories from the Streams” series shows how Stroud Center scientists, educators, and private citizens are working every day to maintain the quality of the water that sustains 15 million people living in the Delaware River Watershed. The number one question that we get about hemp wood; the number one thing people do when they get a piece in their hand is smell it. When you go to a box shop and you get your flooring at Lowe’s or Home Depot, and they’re like, “Oh, hey, solid Oak flooring,” is typically red Oak. The majority of your people are doing it the right way. And then actually, there’s something called the maillard effect that happens in the glue, which I didn’t even know about until this happened. So getting back into the process, once it comes out of the dryer, we batch it again. Greg Wilson:Yeah. And so it can actually heat the water to the temperature that we need because it only needs to be 100 degrees instead of 250. And so then it heats the water, which then recirculates through the dryer. The number two thing or the number one thing that they say to us is, “What happens when it catches on fire, you’re going to get high and the firefighters? Greg Wilson:And then a round bale is a round bale around-. And just kept coming back into the office. And you named your company Fibonacci, who is a pretty famous mathematician and has his own sequence and everything. And at the end of the day, people are trying to provide for theirs, whatever that is. Now, Laura is dedicated to growing and offering healthy hemp derived CBD. We got our factory operational in ’19, and we actually had our finished goods ready to launch at NoCo the end of March, and then at the North American Wood Flooring Association at the end of April. COVID turned all that upside down. Because it’s not the same as your traditional woods.