Okay. Thank you, Michael. I will start with a brief overview, as I always do. We currently own about 112,000 acres on 168 different farms and about 49,000 acre feet of water assets and we are currently increasing that. One acre foot is equal to about 326,000 gallons, so we’re nearly 16 billion gallons of water. This is protecting our land, because without water, the land is not worth much. And together, the land and all the water are valued at a total of approximately $1.5 billion. Our farms are in 15 different states, more importantly, in 29 different growing regions, and our water assets are all in California. Our farms are leased to 90 different tenant farmers and the tenants on these farms are growing 60 different types of crops, mostly fruits, mostly vegetables, and a lot of nuts. You can find all of these in the produce section of your grocery store, which is where most of these crops are sold. Let me just deviate here a minute. When we have diversification like this and we are well diversified. You have some problems in each of the regions. And so those are in the diversification that you are trying to maintain. For example, almonds and pistachios both have reduced demand, so prices are low today and it may take years for the balance to come back. Almonds are an international crop and people are not eating as many almonds as they did in the past and the price of producing almonds has risen due to inflation in farming cost. So, some people cannot afford to buy almonds and pistachios and that reduced demand makes it a problem for all our farmers in that area. And there are farms that have problems. For example, Michigan blueberries had a pretty good crop this year and reasonably good sales. But our farmers, one farmer there had a very tragic accident. He was injured and he couldn’t farm. So we are moving forward with a sale of those farms. And we believe we will be okay once we have sold them. Hopefully that happens this year. And we have a few grape farms that do not have the varieties that people want who make wine. So, selling them, we are going to try to sell a couple of those as well. Such is the nature of owning farmland. It’s just like owning businesses. You don’t want – I didn’t want stockholders to think that owning farmland is immune from the ups and downs of the economy or the business of farming. I think during the rest of the calendar year, 2024, we will sort out these problems. There are other parts of farming that have problems such as tomatoes. Mexico has been subsidizing tomatoes and hurt tomato farmers. We are very lucky not to be in tomato farms. So we missed that problem. Likewise, we did not invest in citrus. It’s been terrible for the citrus farmers in Florida. We have a few citrus trees, but they are not in Florida. The trees have been devastated in Florida by disease and they may never turn around. There are oranges coming in from being produced at other countries. And there is reduced drinking of orange juice. I remember as a child drinking lots of orange juice. People don’t drink as much orange juice as they did 20 years ago. So we are smart not to be in Florida orange juice business. So just to give you that overview, I thought of that last night and decided to put that into our discussion. And now I’ll give you a quick update of some of the tenants’ issues that we’ve been working through and we’ve been telling you about them. We currently have two properties encompassing 4 out of the 168 farms that we have. And these are vacant. And properties encompass 11 farms in direct operating via the management agreement. So we have had to take over a number of farms and do them on our own. In addition, we are recognizing revenue from leases with two tenants who are collectively leasing four of our farms on a cash basis. Regarding the vacant and farms that are operating farms, we are in discussions with various potential buyers or tenants to buy or lease these properties. And I think we will have a lot of this done during the next 6 months. So I am hopeful that when we report to you in July that we fixed a lot of that. There are two tenants on non-accrual status. One of them is now current on their rental payments to us and we are continuing to work with a collection of other tenants. On a total year-over-year impact on our operating results, these tenants issued decreased our net operating income by about $750,000 for the first quarter. And as mentioned on the past several calls, we continue to be cautious with new investments, because our cost of capital remains high. More farmland rental rates haven’t increased enough to cover all the extra costs that farmers have. And because farmland values remain high, that is, the farmers, the people who own the land, the values have remained high and they want the high price for it. We just don’t feel like it’s worth taking that risk. So as a result, acquisition activity remains slow for us and probably be for another couple of quarters. With inflation still above the Fed’s target, that’s the main problem right now, is the Federal Reserve needs to cut rates and that might begin sometime this year, but it won’t be nearly good enough for the very large farmers. We don’t have many of those. But for the small farmer, that really pushes them down pretty bad. But overall, the existing farmland portfolio continues to perform more or less as expected, with the exception of those issues I just mentioned. As you know, we sold one of the properties that resulted in a nice gain for us. This was a large farm in Florida that we bought for about $54 million 7 years ago. We have gotten nice rents on it as we’ve gone along. But we sold it and we got $66 million for it. Net of closing costs is about a $10 million gain for us and that’s been a tremendous winner for us. And I will note that the price was sold, it was sold for about $2 million more than we had it appraised at prior to the sale. So during the quarter, we valued it lower than we sold it for. I think that’s a good indication that we haven’t overpriced a lot of our farms. On the leasing front, since the beginning of the quarter, we renewed or amended four leases on farms in two different states. In total, these renewals are expected to result in a decrease, not an increase, of the annual net operating income of about $800,000 per year. That’s on the prior leases. However, a majority of the decrease is due to one lease agreement executed on a nut farm in California in which we reduced the fixed base rent in exchange for increasing the upside potential in participation rents. Looking ahead, we have five leases scheduled to expire over the next 6 months. In total, it makes up about 9% of our total lease revenue. We are in discussion with groups to lease these farms and aren’t currently anticipating any additional vacancies as a result of these. However, two of the expiring leases are on nut farms in California. And those will likely decrease the base rent in exchange for increasing participation rents. That’s some of the problems that are out. Just one other item I’d like to mention. As mentioned on the last quarterly call, our team in California has been working to implement various projects and strategies to take advantage of the surplus water supplies that have come to be available in California. As many of you know, there have been huge rains. We have had two very wet winters, which is unusual for California. And the rains have not just been the little things that we sometimes see in the east. These have been rains of biblical proportions. I mean, people have had a lot of water wash away. And we have had a few farms that were impacted a bit. But one farm actually took on too much water, so they couldn’t do as much for it. So it’s coming back this year. One such project involved construction of a large groundwater recharge facility on two of our farms, both of which were completed last year. These are, in essence, water banks allowing us to enter into various agreements with both local water districts and private individuals they are expected to result in additional groundwater credits by allowing water to be stored in our water banks. During the quarter, we were able to obtain an addition 2,676 acre feet or about 872 million gallons of water credits for a total cash cost of approximately $345,000 or right at $129 per acre foot, which is significantly below market. These will come in handy as time goes on. Valuations of farms are now based on how much water they have and usually they have to have two sources of water. We still believe these type of projects are important in achieving long-term sustainable water supplies for our farms in California. And we intend to continue to focus on water security for our farms throughout 2024. And just to note, our portfolio currently has adequate supply of water to-date. None of our farms have been fallowed or not farmed because of irrigation problems due to the inadequacy of water. In some places, there have been problems and we are not seeing that on our farms. We also wonder about the effects of government regulations. They do regulate how we used. And so we have gone through that with many of our farms and we seem to be in good shape there. We do look forward that these projects that we have with the reserved water that we have for them could go at least 1 year unabated, but I think they may go on as much as 2 years based on how much water we have captured. So let me stop here and I’ll turn it over to Lewis Parrish, he is our CFO and he knows the numbers. Lewis?