There is quite a difference, because a lot of fall and winter annuals need a killing frost to slow them down to the point that the ClearOut 41 Plus will work.
You made a statement a while ago, and I'll check the blues, but your quote was, “If we say to do this and it doesn't make sense to a farmer, they're not going to do it.” This whole idea of frost somehow prohibiting them from going out and doing their fall work and killing their winter annuals doesn't make any sense to me. Those are the phone calls I'm getting. Now I see you've consulted with provincial agricultural specialists. So it's not just me; it's Mark Wartman in Saskatchewan, it's Roseanne Wowchuk in Manitoba, and so on, who have to share some of this heat we're taking.
I find it quite hypocritical--that might be the best or kindest word I can use--in that I can buy it off the shelf and it says not to use it after a frost, and you're saying it's prohibited to use it after a frost. I don't think the label says that. It probably says it doesn't recommend you use it, but I've never read the label. I'm too busy mixing it and using it.
I find it at cross-purposes that we would regulate it differently—and it still comes in under your watch—to put it on the shelf of the co-op or in my truck as I come across the border. I find it at cross-purposes that those two things don't jive.
One other point I noticed in your presentation was the one thing you didn't mention.... Let's back up on ClearOut 41 Plus for a second. Was it one of the first 13 candidates, as you called them? It has been accepted under the GROU.