Thank you, Jonathan. I thought it would be useful to give a brief update on operations before touching on other company highlights. In the first quarter, the company successfully drilled the first well of our operated 1 rig Cherokee drilling program, with first production anticipated later this month. Dean will touch more on this later. While we are anticipating our first result later this month, four non-ops and industry wells directly offsetting this well and other DSUs we will be developing this year at initial average production rates of over 1,000 barrels of oil or 2,000 barrels of equivalent per day. These new wells give further confidence to reservoir quality, result consistency, and expectations in the area. We hope to share more details on this and our operated results next quarter. As I mentioned previously, production for the quarter increased approximately 17% and 30% on a BOE and oil basis year-over-year. As we look forward to developing our high-return Cherokee assets this year, we anticipate growing oilier production volumes further. From a timing perspective, most of the production from our development program will occur in the second half of this year, with exit rates projected around 19 MBoe per day and increasing oil production rates estimated around another 30% relative to Q1. In addition, two completions will carry over into the next year, and should further drilling also continue, we will see production volumes, and specifically oil volumes, increase meaningfully above the year-end 25 exit rates level. However, please keep in mind that we will continue to be mindful of results, commodity prices, costs, macroeconomics, and other factors which will shape our capital decisions this year and beyond. Shifting over to commodity prices, WTI prices have been around the low $60 range over the last several weeks and recently tested to high 50s. Although the forward-looking curve has been relatively flat, we will continue to vigilantly monitor WTI prices. Current commodity prices are operated Cherokee Wells, have a robust return, and break-evens for these new wells are down to $35 WTI. However, we could begin to moderate or curtail a portion of our capital program before we reach these levels if headwinds are more severe and present further pressure on returns. Given that the program is weighted in the back half of the year, we have time to continue to monitor commodity prices. As we do not have significant leasehold expirations this year, we have the flexibility to defer these projects, if needed, for a period of time in order to better time the commodity environment and optimize both our cash flows and project returns. While our acreage is 95% held by production, we do have undeveloped leases to include leases in the Cherokee play that have expirations. So long and short, we have the flexibility to adjust our capital program this year to respond to commodity price challenges, and we'll do so in a judicious manner while managing lease expirations and other considerations. Now, onto natural gas prices. We've benefited during the with Henry Hub prices, which have been more robust and durable, rising to $4.30 per Mcf, a near doubling of that from 2024. While there has been some volatility in early Q2, the natural gas price outlook remains strong. The real so what here is the optionality we have across our asset base, coupled with the strength of our balance sheet that situates us well to navigate changing commodity environments. Combination of our Cherokee and legacy assets, as well as improvement in natural gas prices, give us multi-faceted options to maneuver and leverage different commodity cycles. Our Cherokee development adds value with WTI as constructive, and we can take advantage of our legacy properties through well reactivation, incremental production optimization projects, and possibly even as development at the appropriate natural gas and liquid prices, or potentially both when WTI and Henry Hub are both constructive. Conversely, given the relatively low breakeven of our producing properties and our cash balance of just over $100 million, we're also well positioned, not only the weather, but the right circumstances to take advantage of lower commodity environments by acquiring additional producing properties at attractive prices. Put more simply, we have a strong balance sheet and a more versatile kit bag, which makes the company more resilient and better poised to maneuver and adjust with the commodity environment. Now, I'll turn things over to Dean to discuss operations in more detail.