Well, we started out with soybeans; we will probably be focusing in on canola. We're actually aiming toward mustard as the product that will probably fit our market, because you can't take the high-value food oil canola commodity that Canada prides itself on and make an industrial commodity out of it.
I'll just add to what Vince said about regulation. We're dealing with a western partner from Saskatoon who is trying to get mustard registered as a bio-pesticide. People use mustard as a rotation crop. They plow it down and think it's great. Agriculturalists will recommend it.
We had a feasibility study done, and it's going to take three to five years and over $1 million to get mustard meal registered. It has a legal patent developed by Ag Canada researchers 15 years ago, and all it involves is taking the meal from mustard and spreading it on your lawn or your strawberry crops to kill nematodes or cinch bugs. It's pretty simple: you grow the plant, plow it down green, and you can use it. It's beyond me why it's going to take three to five years and a million bucks to get it registered as a bio-pesticide in Canada.