Timothy Wojs: Okay. Okay. Good. And then maybe just on the Pro landscape business, just kind of, I guess, two questions there. How would you kind of characterize the field inventory levels within the kind of Pro part of that business, I guess, is the first question. And then I guess the second question, just when you think about the overall kind of Pro landscape business, how much of that would you assign to the homeowner versus the actual professional?
Rick Olson: Yes. If you — first of all, on the inventory question, we for the last number of years have struggled with enough inventory in the field. That’s a category where we have now at least normal, in some cases, higher inventory than is probably optimum in the field for the landscape contractor business. Keep in mind this is across three brands, the Toro brands, Exmark and Spartan. And the homeowner is — I don’t have a specific number for you, but the homeowner is an appreciable portion of that business. And this would be a homeowner that has a large acreage or the land to justify a more professional product and so that’s kind of the situation there. So homeowners is an element of that. They would be the less demand coming from homeowners.
The Pro demand continues to be very strong for LTE landscape contractors and the professional products. So — and that would correlate to the field inventory as well, which is higher field inventories, so lower end of that range, lower inventory of the more professional grade.
Timothy Wojs: Okay. That’s helpful. And then maybe just a last question. Is there — within the Residential business, is there any way to kind of think about how much the — your 60V products now are as a percentage of that overall business?
Rick Olson: We — I don’t have a specific number of the 60V reflects. But if you just think about if the Residential business is 20% to 25% of our overall business, that’s one of the smaller categories overall.
Timothy Wojs: Okay. Okay. Good. I appreciate the color and the time. Good luck at the back half of the year, guys. Thanks.
Rick Olson: Okay, thank you. I appreciate the questions.
Operator: One moment for our next question. And our next question will come from David MacGregor of Longbow Research. Your line is open.
David MacGregor: Yes. Good morning everyone. Congratulations on getting the golf and the special construction velocity, but I think that’s a good sign. Yes. I mean that’s got to be a weight off your mind. I wanted to just maybe pick up on Tim’s question on landscape contractor. Can you just talk about what you’re seeing in terms of retail demand patterns? I mean it looks like you’ve set a back-to-back sales events and landscape contractor to extend now through July 31 or pretty late into the season, which just suggests the majority of that business in this category this year is going to be incentivized. Is the demand elasticity increasing in that category? And if so, do you make any adjustments for that in your revisions you made to guidance?
Rick Olson: We — as a normal process of creating our guidance, we would build in our best thinking with regard to any programs, et cetera, and programs have come back into the picture. They haven’t been much of a factor for the last number of years. But especially, as you can imagine until later spring, we’re really counting on more of that normal retail to shift into the later part of the year. So that’s probably what you’re seeing, if you’re looking at some — looking at some programs. I would just — there was an earlier question about field inventory, I would just say, in general, for all professional products, field inventory is very low at this point, much lower than we’d like to see certainly, for the half of the LTE that we were talking about is the true professional products. Some of the entry-level portions of that are a little different story that are more commonly purchased by homeowners that prefer professional products.