Thank you, Catherine. Folks, we sold a few more farms during the fourth quarter, which brought us to 6 property sales for the year totaling $95 million in proceeds, and we recognized an aggregate gain from these sales of about $21 million. So your company is in good shape today. After these sales, we still own nearly 99,000 acres across 144 farms, so about 56,000 acre-feet. In case you forgot, I'll translate that to 18 billion gallons of water that we've got stored in aquifers, and so we're in good shape for that part of our work. Our farms are in 14 different states and our water assets are all in California. And right now, there's plenty of water in California. So we're all in good shape from that perspective. Regarding the two sales we completed during the quarter, one was a small blueberry farm down in North Carolina. The tenant had fallen behind in his rents, and it was a tough property for us to get to new tenants. So while we took a small loss in the sale, we thought it best just to get rid of that farm since it was out of the normal territory that we're in. The other sale was a really nice farm in Colorado, where the lease was set to expire at the end of the year, and we were likely facing a downward rent bump and reset. So we took the opportunity to sell the property for more than we had in it originally and paid. So it was decided to go ahead and take the gain and move from that area of farms. We may consider selling some additional farms. In fact, we've got several that we're talking to buyers over the next few quarters and this part of ongoing portfolio review. If we're able to complete some of those, we'd like to use most of the proceeds to pay down debt and also to buy back some of that more expensive preferred stock that we have and trigger a gain there. But we're still evaluating the opportunities. And at this point, we're hopeful of a good transaction that will come and show how good we are in buying and holding these properties. On the acquisition side, financing costs, which seem to be slowly moving closer to where we like them to be, but we're not quite there yet. We're hoping interest rates will continue to move in the right direction. That is down. So we can get back to growing the portfolio as we've been out of the business for quite a while. We've got a lot of land that we own, but it'd be nice to pick up some now because prices seem to be moving in the right direction. We're still taking a disciplined approach to any new investments. Interest rates and our overall cost of capital remain elevated and the capital rates on most row crop farmland is still too low to make it economically work for us today if we have to use a lot of debt to buy it. On the leasing side, first, we've talked about on prior calls due to the market conditions affecting certain permanent crops, particularly nuts and wine grapes, we adjusted the lease structure on a handful of properties to help our growers reduce their fixed costs. And as a result of doing that reduction, in essence, we're taking a larger percentage of the gross crop sales instead of fixed rent payment. We also decided to direct operation of two properties ourselves with the help of third-party operators. We believe a lot of the farms in the United States are just set up like that. So people bring in farming expertise as we are. And well, I'll let Bill and Lewis, the two next speakers talk about that. But overall, we had a successful harvest, particularly with almonds and pistachios. We're still expecting significant amounts of revenue from the 2025 pistachio harvest to come during 2026. So they're not in there yet. But we won't know the exact amount until the processes of those nuts have their finalized, their settlement with us. I wanted to remind everyone about this modified structure that we're using because we're simple approach to most of these farms for 2026 crop year is going to be exactly the same as we used last year. And I think it's also important to again highlight the role of crop insurance. In these cases, one of the reasons we feel so confident in taking this approach, which is a little bit like gambling on these special farms is their strong history of high production. And since insurance coverage is largely based on historical yields, we're able to secure relatively high levels of insurance. So to give you an example of this, if one of our crops was that's insured is wiped out by some strange disease or whatever, the insurance allows us to recover the amount of capital that we put into these farms. And that's nice to know that the downside is covered. Our goal is still to eventually transition these leases back to more traditional structure with fixed base rents. But our ability to do so will depend on many factors actually, external factors such as crop productions, crop prices, interest rates, input cost of growing the nuts or whatever strawberries and water availability. We've kind of got the last one covered to some degree, water availability, as you probably read in the newspapers and reports. Water is plentiful in California and the amount of snow in the mountains, which will melt during the summer and run off is pretty good shape. In other leasing activity, we executed 5 renewals during the quarter. We saw a modest increase of about 7% on two of these row crops as a renewal. For three permanent crops, we reduced the fixed base rent in exchange for additional crop share component, which is what we've done a lot of time. We should have roughly flat compared to those of prior leases on those farms. Looking ahead, we have 5 leases scheduled to expire over the next 6 months. In total, this represents about 3.6% of our total 2025 lease revenue. We're currently in discussions with existing tenants and prospective new tenants about leasing each of these farms. So I'm pretty optimistic about getting those rented. And now I'll take a quick update of some of the ongoing tenancy matters that we're working through. We currently have 9 farms that are wholly or partially vacant, and we're growing crops on some of these. Encompassing 4 of the farms we've been direct operators under management agreements with unrelated third-party growers. We also recognize revenue on a cash basis for leases with 3 tenants who collectively lease about 5 of our farms. That should be okay. We are actively working towards solution for each of these situations. We think we are close to having a resolution in place for a few of these farms soon. And hopefully, we can get some of them off of this list over the next few months. I'm going to stop here. We've got Bill Reiman on the call, and Bill is the man who really understands us since he's been working in the farming area for most of his career. So Bill, take it away.