Tanel, I like that sub pen shot.
Off topic just a moment: One of Alabama's biggest agricultural products is pine trees for lumber and pulp. Of course, clear-cutting is the most efficient way to harvest, and then re-plant with pine seedlings. But there is pressure to select-cut instead, leaving hardwoods in the creek bottoms, ridges and swampy areas. This yields a second way to make money: leasing land to deer hunters. Deer like mixed forest, and that is what they get with select cutting: always some young pines in which to raise fawns, clear-cut patches full of new, green forbs from the grasses and weeds that grow with the young pines, hardwoods like oaks that provide acorns, mature pines in which to travel from one spot to another, and space for hunters to plant food plots for additional food for wildlife.