Okay, thank you, Roland. Slide 9 is the breakdown of our 2023 quarter end drilling inventory. A drilling inventory is split between Haynesville and Bossier we got it divided into four buckets. Our short laterals up to 5,000 feet, our medium laterals that run between 5,000 feet and 8,000 feet. Our long laterals run from 8,000 feet to 11,000 feet, and our recently created category of our extra-long laterals for our wells that exceed 11,000 feet laterals. Our total operated inventory currently stands at 1,810 gross locations, 1,364 net locations, which equates to a 75% average working interest on the operated inventory. Our non-operated inventory we have 1,310 gross locations in 182 net locations, which represents a 14% average working interest on our non-operated inventory. Based on the success of our recent extra-long lateral wells, we continue to leverage our acreage position where possible to modifier our drilling inventory and extend our future laterals specifically targeting the 10,000 foot to 15,000 foot range. And our extra-long lateral bucket, we currently have 459 gross operated locations and 334 net operated locations. And to recap, to recap our gross operated inventory, we have 313 short laterals, 298 medium laterals, 740 long laterals, and the 459 extra-long laterals. The gross operated inventory is split 53% in the Haynesville and 47% in the Bossier. By extending our laterals, the average lateral length in our inventory now stands at 8,928 feet. This is up slightly from our 8,870 feet we had at the end of 2022. In addition to the economic uplift, the longer laterals reduce our surface footprint and help us to reduce our greenhouse gas and methane intensity levels. Based on our plan 2023 activity level this inventory provides us with a 25-year runway of future drilling locations. On Slide 10 as a chart, this outlines the average lateral length, we've drilled by year. During the first quarter we turned 19 wells to sales with an average lateral length of 9,898 feet. The individual laterals ranged from 4,514 feet on the short end up to a 15,580 foot 584 foot long lateral on the long end. 15 of the 19 wells we turned to sales during the quarter were our benchmark long lateral wells that are greater than 8,000 feet long. Five of the wells were beyond 11,000 foot laterals. We had two of the laterals coming in longer than 15,000 feet. Our record long lateral well still stands at 15,726 feet. This is on our East Texas acreage and that well was turned to sales during the fourth quarter of last year. Included in the group is the third well, we recently completed on our Western Haynesville acreage, the Campbell [ph] #2H well, which was completed in the Bossier formation with a 12,763 foot long-lateral. Based on our current schedule, we plan to turn another 52 wells to sales by year end. 22 of these 52 future wells will be extra-long laterals beyond 11,000 feet and 12 of the wells will be 15,000 foot laterals. If successful our 2023 year-end average lateral length will increase to approximately 10,855 feet. Slide 11 outlines our new, a new well activity. We have turned to sales and tested 15 new wells since the time of our last call. We had really good well performance again on this group of wells with the individual IP rates ranging from 13 million a day up to 37 million cubic feet a day, and with an average test rate of 23 million a day. The average lateral length was 11,042 feet with the individual laterals ranged from 4,514 feet up to 15,584 feet. Included in this latest well activity our six wells that were completed on our liquids rich Haynesville acreage in Panola County, the gas produced on this acreage represents 25 barrels to 30 barrels at natural gas liquids, which in turn enhances our economics 20% to 30% versus the dry gas well. The average IP rate for our working interest ownership in the 15 wells for the quarters 25 million a day, which is comparable to prior quarters, even with the six low IP wells as we have a lower working interest in those wells. Also included this quarter was our successful third well on our Western Haynesville acreage. The Campbell #2 well which was completed in the Bossier with a 12,763 foot long lateral was turned to sales in March. We tested the well with an IP rate of 36 million cubic feet a day and we are currently flowing the well at this rate today and plan to produce the well at this same rate. In addition, we are currently completing our fourth well on the acreage and have a fifth well that is waiting on completion. We expect to turn both of these next two wells to sales within the next couple of months. Additionally, we're running two rigs on our Western Haynesville acreage its currently drilling our sixth and seventh wells. Slide 12 summarizes our D&C cost through the first quarter for our benchmark long lateral wells, which covers all our wells greater than 8,000 feet on our legacy core East Texas, North Louisiana acreage position. 14 of the 19 wells we turn to sales during the quarter were these benchmark long lateral wells. In the first quarter, our D&C cost averaged $1,579 per foot, which is an 11% increase compared to the fourth quarter and a 19% increase over our full year 2022 D&C cost. Our first quarter drilling costs came in at $663 a foot, which is a 14% increase compared to the fourth quarter. The majority of the drilling cost increase is attributable to a shorter average lateral length of this quarter versus the last, along with inflation as most of the wells we turned to sales were drilled in the third quarter and early fourth quarter. Our first quarter completion costs came in at $916 a foot, which is a 9% increase compared to the fourth quarter. The primary contributor to our higher completion costs during the first quarter was the fact that only 20% of our first quarter well completions were fraced with our Titan natural gas fleet as opposed to more than half of our fourth quarter wells were frac used in the Titan natural gas fleet. As mentioned on the previous calls, we've been able to capture significant savings through the use of the Titan natural gas fuel fleet compared to the conventional diesel fleet. With that being said, we are expecting the delivery of our second Titan fleet within the next couple of months. To sum up where we stand on activity levels, we are currently running eight rigs. One of these will be released in a couple of weeks to bring us down to seven rigs. On Slide of 13, we highlight our continued improvement related to greenhouse gas methane emissions. We reported a greenhouse gas intensity of 3.47 kilograms of CO2 equivalent per BOE of production. This is a 3% improvement versus 2021. Well, we reported a methane emission intensity rate of 0.045%, which is a 16% improvement versus 2021, and we achieved those emissions improvements despite our turn into sales lateral feet increasing by 10% in 2022, adjusting for lateral length completed for our turn to sales wells. Our greenhouse gas emissions per lateral foot turn to sales improve 10% while our methane emissions per lateral foot turned to sales improved by 22%. We deployed optical gas imaging and aircraft leak monitoring technology at almost 100% of our production sites, which earned us the ability to certify our gas is responsibly sourced. Our natural gas-powered frac fleet eliminated approximately five million gallons of diesel by utilizing natural gas offsetting approximately 10,200 metric tons of CO2 equivalent. As a reminder, our first natural gas-powered frac fleet began operating in April. So that date reflects just nine months of contribution to our 2022 numbers. With our second natural gas-powered fleet arriving in the field by the end of the second quarter, we should see continued reductions in our emissions. Our dual fuel drilling rigs eliminated approximately 0.6 million gallons of diesel by utilizing natural gas, which offset approximately 1,900 metric tons of CO2 equivalent. We installed instrument on approximately 65% of our newly constructed production facilities mitigating approximately 4,000 metric tons of CO2 equivalent. I'm now going to turn the call back over to Jay. You can sum up the 2023 outlook.