Well, thank you, Michael. I will start off with a brief overview of our farmland holdings. We currently own about 116,000 acres on 169 farms and about 45,000 acre feet of bank water acreage foot is equal to about 327,000 gallons. So that’s about 14.6 billion gallons of water that we have in the ground in California mostly. And together, they are valued at about $1.6 billion for both the land and the water. Our farms are in 15 different states, and more importantly, it’s in 29 different growing regions. Farms continue to be 100% occupied and leased to about 90 different tenant farmers, all of whom are unrelated to us. And the tenants on these farms are growing about 60 different types of crops, but mostly fruits and vegetables and nuts. We have two slow paying tenants and partly due to excess supply and market for their respective crops. Markets sometimes get oversupplied and can be slow to cure themselves, but they usually do over a certain period of time, it’s slower sales, so it takes a while to get there. As we have mentioned in the past couple of calls, acquisition activities remained slower for us than in the past as we continue to be much more selective in the type of farms we are looking at. Higher interest rates also impact the level of returns we can be able to achieve on any new acquisition. That too will pass. With inflation and interest rates continue to rise and the risk of recession becoming more likely, we believe it’s a good time to be much more selective with our capital. But overall, our existing farmland portfolio continues to perform pretty much as expected, with the exceptions of the issues we are having with two tenants, which led us to reverse out about $1 million in revenue in the fourth quarter and so we hope to collect that in the future, but there’s no guarantees on that. But despite those issues, we have another very strong quarter for you and from an operating standpoint. We have good results from our participation rents, has recorded about $4.7 million in additional income during this quarter. This resulted in a record total participation rents of about $7.7 million this year, compared with about $5.2 million in 2021. So a nice increase there in participation rents. The increase was largely driven by strong yields on our pistachio farms coupled with the continued strong demand for the crop. We had lower results on our almond farms and this is due to a weaker almond prices as the amount of almond market continues to be hampered by oversupply and exaggerated by the supply chain disruptions that arose during the COVID pandemic. Almonds are sold all over the world, and quite frankly, almonds in California end up all over Europe and especially in India, for example. Finally, we continue to be able to renew all expiring leases without incurring any downtime on any of our farms. We did change up a couple of the leases structured wise, in which we reduced the fixed based rent in exchange for increasing the crop share component. We will see this nice wet year in California, if that was the right thing to do. We think we are in good shape for those once the numbers come in, but we will have to wait for the year-end in order for that to be proved out. Excluding those leases, we continue to execute renewals at higher rental rates. We won small acquisition during the fourth quarter of 443 acres. It’s an open ground piece. We bought it for about $3 million. This ground is adjacent to the farm we already own, right next door and has both surface water rights and groundwater pumping rights. So the intention is to use these water rights as an additional source of water for nearby farm. We also sell water -- we also can sell water credits on our property to tenants on the other farms that are near ours. For the year-end, the team acquired over 3,000 new acres, six different states for a total of $65 million. Overall, the initial cash yield to us on these investments is about 5.8% and the leases on these farms contain certain provisions such as participation rents that we just mentioned and we also have annual escalations in which if you go from one year to the next year, it may be up by 3% or 4% and that should push the figures higher in the future for these farms. On the leasing front, we renewed nine leases on the farms in four different states. In total, these renewals are expected to result in a decrease in annual net operating income of about $857,000 from the prior leases, mainly because we moved some of those leases from fixed rent to participation rents. However, this decrease was the result of lease amendments and we executed three of our permanent planting farms in which either reduced or fixed the base rent or agreed to cover some fixed amount of the farm’s operating cost. Excluding these three leases, lease renewals executed on our farms growing row crops are expected to result in an increase in net operating income of approximately $66,000. It’s about a 12% increase over the prior leases. Looking ahead, we only have one lease scheduled to expire over the next six months. It makes up less than 1% of our total annualized lease revenue. We are in discussions with the current tenant on this farm regarding the extensions and we believe we will be able to achieve a slight rent increase on this firm, but we aren’t currently expecting any downtime to occur on the result of this upcoming expiration. A few other items to mention before we get over to Lewis in the financial world, inflation continues to be forefront in most people’s mind, as well as ours. The headline inflation numbers, of course, are about 6.4% per year that’s much higher than we want it to be at, and on the other hand, this is a category that’s going to benefit from that. It’s called food-at-home. It’s a category that was up by 11.3%. So that’s way ahead of 6.4% for the entire nation. This is a category where nearly all of the crops grown on our farms falls into that category and most of our crops are sold in grocery stores. So when you go in the grocery store and you look at the produce section, that’s where you would find the products that our farmers are producing. We believe the increase in food prices will vary substantially cover -- out cover the -- outpace the inflation that’s going on now. That should mitigate the increase in operating costs that many of our farmers are experiencing now. Regardless -- regarding the recent floods in California, that’s a new one to talk about there is floods in California. We are always sad to hear about the devastation caused by natural disasters, especially this one in California. However, all of the rain and snow brought some relief to the region that has experienced drought conditions for most of the past three years. You are talking about extra feet of snow in the mountains that will melt this summer and flood all the areas down below, which is -- I know all of our people in California are very happy about what’s going on. As a result of the storms, the snowpack levels are nearly 2 times their 20-year historical average. Most reservoirs in the state are also nearing their historical norms. In addition, there were no longer any areas in California that are in the two most severe drive categories, which is the first time in three years, that’s been the case. No one is proclaiming the drought to be over, of course, much more rain is still needed to recharge most of the aquifers. We would love to see the aqua to get fully recharged. We won’t get that out of this rainstorm. But maybe as it happens over the next couple of years we can get there. All of our farms are in the West, have wells on them, as well as those in the East, and so far, none of our farms have suffered water shortages due to the wells not being able to reach the aquifers. In addition, we continue to look at the opportunities to provide additional sources of water in our farms and we are constantly working on that. The State of California hasn’t done all they could do in order to help us capture that water that’s coming down. One final note on the recent floods out West, none of our farms suffered any extensive damage as a result of the storms. We had one farm that lost some shade structures, which were protecting blueberry buses from the wind and other adverse weather elements. But generally speaking, the bushes are fine and the structures are covered by insurance, so we will just build those back. They are forecasting rain out there all day today and for the next six days, so we are going to see a lot more water coming out there. Finally, regarding our capital plans, the offering of our Series C preferred stock was terminated in December after selling about $254 million of securities over the prior three years. Interest rates rose leading at -- leading acquisition activity to slow down, it became difficult to put those proceeds to work at an effective manner so we just pulled that out. In last month, January 2023, we began selling a new Series E preferred stock, which carries an interest rate of 5%. Sales are beginning slow as we expected. So don’t expect this to sell at the same pace as Series C was selling, but we like having multiple sources of capital available to us. So we know we have it when we need it. In addition, we started using our ATM program that’s at-the-market program, which allows us to keep selling common stock directly to anyone who shows up once it, again, a few months ago, the plan to continue to do so as long as the price is fixed sense for us. We stopped selling that when the price dropped below 2019 and we will see what happens over the next six months. Got a great strong company, so we think it will start selling again. I am going to stop at this point, that’s enough on the operations and now I will turn it over to our CFO, Lewis Parrish, to talk more about the numbers. Lewis?