Earlier you referred to the market meltdown and the issues around the market meltdown. The market meltdown started in September or October of last year. In November we were in the heart of it. If we're going to have a market meltdown, your prices should have started melting down then, not in January-February.
Another reason I say I have this love-hate relationship with potash.... I think potash right now is about $950 a tonne. We're shutting down mines. I've talked to a few agents--who asked that I not pass their name forward, so I won't--who are very concerned about whether they're actually going to get physical supplies, yet you're saying there's a surplus of potash. Well, not in Canada then, if they're concerned that they're not going to get supplies.
Another issue now is that if we're going to see barley go into the ground without potash, it means we'll probably have a reduction in yield, more disease, and other pressures. Mr. Whalen might be correct; you're generating a self-fulfilling prophecy of reduction in food.