The corn is kind of different today because a lot of people don’t grow their own. I got my seed from my grandmother, who got it from her dad. So I have a pretty old, pretty good strain of Indian corn that I have and that I use in my family. I’m very protective. I don’t grow it by no other corn so it’s not pollinated by something else. It’s a real strong corn. It’s very hardy. If you grow Indian corn in the same forty-acre field of sweet corn, or field corn, or another kind of corn, they will get their color into another corn. It won’t be vice-versa. The sweet corn can’t affect Indian corn. Indian corn will affect the sweet corn.