I think last quarter, I said a range of $20 to $25, and I don’t think that’s a good range for the Barnett. Now some of that, obviously, as you mentioned, depends on pricing. And if pricing is lower, we certainly at the lower end of that range, and not higher. But I still think the $20 to $25 a barrel for the Barnett is probably a good longer-term way to model that. And on the other areas, obviously, we’ve seen, those have been pretty consistent, really, if you look on the other areas, kind of area to area, with the exception of . So the Williston having some less workover activity this quarter, which we saw a little bit of drop in LOE in that area specifically.
Kelly Loyd: And if you recall, Donovan, last quarter, we spoke to Williston. Foundation was doing a really good job of pulling strings completely and changing amount, getting ahead of the curve, which should have the effect of keeping them on long and having less downtime. So we front-loaded some of that LOE workover costs at Williston. Last quarter in — you see the effect of it this quarter.
Donovan Schafer: I see. I see. Okay. And then last question and I’ll hop back in the queue. But since you paid off the debt and you’ve got the buyback, but this also means that all things considered, it means you’re in a great position to be considering or more actively looking at deals as a possibility, kind of seeing where can you get the cheapest barrels and maybe that means buying back your own shares, but that also means comparing against what opportunities that are out there. So how actively are you guys looking at deals right now? And are they more in the form of potential asset purchases or things that you are looking at maybe picking up an entire company?
Kelly Loyd: Okay. So you can — the answer in — a theoretical answer is we’re open to whatever is the best deal and what makes the most sense at that time. Honest answer for what we’ve actually had dug into has been more acquisitions of assets. And that’s not for any reason. Look, over the past, we consider all sorts of deals and what’s the most accretive and what’s going to be the best return for our shareholders. I’m just — in the last few months what we’ve had, we’ve been able to go meet with people about has been more , but that’s just happens to be the case. We’re not opposed to that. And I’ll just say, acquisition front, we’re competitively looking all the time for acquisitions. And I don’t want to get too into the on expected pricing and all that.
But I think I’ve said this before, and you’ve seen it in the last couple of quarters, no deal is better than a bad deal. And sellers have been pricing in high pricing forever when the curves were severely backward dated. And we’ve seen these strips start to change. And I think we’re going to fairly quickly be able to see sellers’ expectations, see if they move as well. I can’t say — I can say that we’re somewhere along the commodity price curve. Certainly, with natural gas, I think we’re a lot further top than we were a couple of months ago. So I agree. We’re starting to — we have been, but we’re digging in as much as ever on the acquisition front.
Operator: And our next question comes from John Bair from Ascend Wealth Advisors.
John Bair: So I have a couple of questions. Number one, is rather interesting pricing that you got from Jonah production. And just wondering if those elevated prices for gas are still out there? Or has that come down with the overall decline in gas prices?