Thanks, Randy, for the question.
Canola represents, on our own farm, about half our acres and about 85% of our net income. It is direly important. It is one of the crops that is a golden child, and it's a great story. As we know, it was made in Canada, right at the University of Saskatchewan, and it is an industry that has grown from free trade and from private industry, collaboratively with growers.
We see that this same model could be used, Randy, in wheat. Agronomically, wheat is just as suited to this part of the world as canola, and it's rather a travesty that wheat is such a dog. I don't blame the Canadian Wheat Board for low commodity prices, but there are so many things they need to react to very quickly. On our farm, wheat uses less than 10% of our acres, because we can't grow it; it just doesn't make sense, competing with other crops.