Mr. Chairman, in answer to Mr. Miller's comments, I did not mention anything about prices going down in the 1980s. My only reference was to the fact that our group did, but I was on the receiving end too when corn prices were at $100 a tonne--I go by metric tonne--and my input costs were going up.
When I came out of university, it was always the opposite. When the price of corn or wheat was going up, your fertilizer tended to do the same. That was just due to demand. Farmers have the ability to pay for the product when they're making money. That's my comment on that.
The other question was basically on how the prices are with the 27% increase. You will see less of a difference between early purchases and the spring. I say that now, but I don't have a crystal ball, because if we experience the same increase in demand for fertilizer and increase in prices on costs, we could see the same thing happen again, coming up, let's say, in the fall of--