Ronnie Pruitt
Analyst · B. Riley Securities
Yes. I would say when we talked about more normal weather, really the more normal weather we experienced was really more in the smile of the U.S., it's really more California-based and then in the South and Texas and then across the Southeast. I mean we saw a lot of very cold start to the year in Illinois and in our Northeast markets. And I would tell you, our shipments reflected that. I would tell you, we started off slower in January, and we built momentum through February and into March. And so really, weather for us, it's 2 parts. I mean, precipitation rain is one thing, and rain obviously affects the day that we're shipping, but the cold start to the year in the Northeast and the cold start to the year in the middle of the country, it definitely had an impact on, one, you're not laying mix and one you're not for in concrete, but 2, you're not operating. I mean, so -- we really got off to a slower start in January in some of our northern markets, but that's typical. I mean, that's not something that caught us off guard. I mean, we knew that was going to -- that's what we planned for it to be cold in Chicago in January. So I would tell you the quarter from a cadence side, I think it played out exactly like we said. And I would tell you, as we got into March, I mean with drier weather and with warmer temperatures, again, the size of these projects matter and where our footprint is matters. And when I say literally 60% of these large projects are within 50 miles of a Vulcan facility, that matters and their ability -- and we highlighted this in our Investor Day when we talked about the complexity of these jobs and how much they want a supplier that can have redundancy, they want suppliers that can meet their production schedule. And some of these schedules literally can drift up 30% or 40% in their schedule as far as the demand perspective, and so that matters. I mean I think our size and location is very critical when it comes to where these projects are going. And so I would anticipate, again, I mean, as we get into the second quarter, I think that cadence will be. But we also said we started off 5% up. We said we still believe we're going to be in growth, but we didn't say we raise our expectations on the overall demand of our products. We think it's still going to play out through the remainder of the year in that low single-digit carry-on.