Thank you, Dan. And in order to preserve the most time for questions, I'll highlight a few financial matters and then address any of your other questions in the Q&A portion of the call. As Dan highlighted in his opening remarks, coming off another quarter of strong and record financial performance, our Board of Directors and our management team feel confident about our strong financial position and about Oil-Dri's future. And that confidence has been reflected in the announcement of a significant double-digit increase to our quarterly dividend. As a team, we continue to work together to strengthen our balance sheet and to demonstrate our ability to generate cash flow, which is the lifeblood for funding our growth and providing returns to our stakeholders. Year-to-date, as of April 30, Oil-Dri's net cash provided by operating activities was $55 million, which was an increase of 49% compared to the net cash provided by operating activities during the first 9 months of fiscal year 2024. Our belief in the sustainability of that cash flow generation inspired us to raise the dividend 16%, an increase much larger than our normal annual increase. We understand that the sustainability and predictability of our dividend is important to our long-term shareholders, and that was reflected in the increase. Going forward, we will continue to take a long-term disciplined approach to capital deployment to balance shareholder returns with reinvestment in the business and potential M&A opportunities. We continue to assess our capital allocation in the following order of priority. First of all, investment in our business for long-term sustainability. We have a fixed asset-intensive business model that requires significant capital investment in our manufacturing facilities, along with investment in expensive mobile equipment in our mining operations. You see this in the cash flows from investing activities section of our consolidated statement of cash flows, indicating that year-to-date, we've invested $24.5 million in these types of assets. We've also invested in enhancing maintenance, which flows through our cost of goods sold to improve uptime in our facilities. This not only leverages the investment in capital equipment in our manufacturing and mining operations, but the increased uptime also helps to improve service levels and responsiveness that's important for our customers. Additionally, we invest in people, process and technology to support our growth strategies. One example of this type of investment is the funding we've provided during this fiscal year to stand up a centralized data analytics function, and there are other examples as well. Second, when we're thinking about our capital allocation, we continue to explore and evaluate M&A opportunities to expand our businesses and support our growth strategies. Our Ultra Pet acquisition, which hit its 1-year anniversary as being part of the Oil-Dri portfolio on May 1 is a great example. That acquisition has performed well. It has hit our internal financial benchmarks and most importantly, has been viewed by our customers very favorably as a value-added product expansion to our portfolio. We initially funded this acquisition with approximately $24 million in cash, $10 million in short-term financing and $10 million in long-term financing. Because of our strong cash generation during this current fiscal year, we've paid off the $10 million in short-term financing, thus leaving Oil-Dri with more dry powder to fund future opportunities. Our third priority when we're thinking about capital allocation is our dividend, our goal to provide a predictable and sustainable dividend to our shareholders. The announcement of the 16% dividend increase marks the 22nd consecutive year of providing increased dividends to our shareholders, and that is a track record that we are proud of. And finally, share repurchases. We buy back shares to offset the dilution associated with restricted stock program for our teammates, and we opportunistically repurchase shares when we believe they're undervalued by the market. Year-to-date, we have not made any open market purchases, but we have bought back shares turned in by our teammates to pay taxes when their restricted shares vested. So those are -- that's the way we think about the cash allocation and the capital allocation. But prior to turning this back over to Dan for questions, I'd like to provide a little color on our effective tax rate. For the third quarter of fiscal year 2025, we used an estimated effective tax rate of 18% compared to 23% for the rate for the third quarter of fiscal year 2024, so a 500-basis point difference. Our process for determining this rate involves preparing our fiscal year's tax return during the third quarter, so after -- for the prior year. So after we prepare that, we've got a view of what our final tax rate looks like for that prior year, we make the tax adjustments that are necessary and book them. Then we take a look at expected annual taxable income for the upcoming year and include any tax adjustments that we're aware of, including the depletion deduction and any other discrete items. While this analysis resulted in year-over-year results in the quarter having a meaningful variation in the quarterly effective tax rates, when we look at that on a full year basis, we still estimate the full year effective tax rate to be about 19% compared to a full year effective tax rate last year of 20.5%. During the current year, we did benefit from a onetime tax credit related to solar investments in our Taft, California facility, which really makes up the difference in why the rate this year is slightly less than the full year effective tax rate that we used last year. So hopefully, that provides a little bit of what's going on in the quarter. I would just recommend that looking at the full year is probably the way to think about it when you're thinking about the future of the business. And with that, Dan, I'll turn it back over to you.