a wheat field. i saw dirt and debris being sucked up along with the roots of the wheat crop. so we stopped at the corner. we took a couple pictures. now the storm redeveloped. it's just a funnel cloud. i don't believe it's on the ground. i'm looking straight north at it. i have great definition. we're in no danger whatsoever. it looks like it's going to recycle. it's going to lose power for a while and then all of this moisture, still 80 degrees outside, 85 degrees where we are, all of this moisture, all of the humidity will be sucked back into this storm. it will regenerate. what i'm concerned with now, now we're only 30, maybe less miles into a major metropolitan area. now we're probably 15 miles. five miles into the suburbs of oklahoma city. and this is where we start to now worry that it's not a wheat field anymore. now it's people's homes, people's lives and they need to take cover. they're hearing the sirens. the sirens are definitely going