Thank you, Kevin. Third quarter 2023 operating cash flow before changes in working capital increased by 22% quarter-over-quarter to $63 million as $10 higher oil prices more than offset 1,000 barrel per day production decline. Quarter-over-quarter, realized oil prices were up 13%, realized natural gas prices were up to $0.58 from a very low $0.02 last quarter and realized NGL prices were up $3 or nearly 60%. Improved pricing benefited from improved basis differentials. I'll caution that some of those improvements have already reversed in October. Increased negative hedge settlements offset 29% of price increases. So differently, 71% of price increases were realized. Operating costs per BOE were flat quarter-over-quarter. LOE increased following some downtime in workovers, which was offset by lower G&A. CapEx declined by 24% on an accrual basis and by 35% on a cash basis, driven primarily by our planned slowdown in activity following the very active first half of 2023. Reinvestment rate, defined as cash CapEx over cash flow from operations before changes in working capital was 50% for the quarter and 76% for the nine months through September. We're forecasting that the reinvestment rate could fall below 70% level for the full year. We're also hopeful that this level of third quarter spending could be more indicative of quarterly run rate levels and the higher spending level in the second quarter of this year. Looking to the fourth quarter CapEx and beyond, we're quite encouraged by what we're seeing. We're procuring services and inventory at improved rates, as Kevin discussed. We're realizing operational synergies, including sharing rigs or other services across both assets. And we're generally making efforts to smooth our development pace, which ideally corresponds with smoother quarterly spending cadence. The combination of higher operating cash flow and significantly reduced CapEx led to $31 million of free cash flow for the quarter. The allocation of this quarter's free cash flow was $10 million for debt pay down, $7 million for the dividend, with the balance working capital. Year-to-date, the allocation has been 55% to dividends and 45% to the balance sheet. Currently, we're forecasting good free cash flow in the fourth quarter despite modestly lower production and lower prices. The majority of fourth quarter free cash flow will be used for debt reduction. We're hoping to reduce the total balance by an additional $25 million by year-end, which is somewhat oil price dependent. This would lead to an increase in the full year allocation percentage to delevering first dividends, maybe closer to 60% delevering and 40% to dividends. On our capital base, we ended the quarter with $400 million of principal value of debt, including $190 million principal value on the unsecured notes. Shares outstanding as of the beginning of November, including unvested amounts totaled 20.4 million, an increase of approximately 1% year-over-year. I'll now pass it back to Bobby for closing.