I just want to follow up on that.
It's true. It's almost like a right to farm, where you have people coming in who will buy 50 acres and bid it up because they're in a different industry. If they're coming from London or an urban centre, or they have the funds, it doesn't matter. They move in and then they start telling you how you should operate and how you're inconveniencing them. They're buying farm property. They're buying a property that's downwind from a livestock operation and then they complain about it. Who's producing the food? Who was here first? Where are our rights?
It's true, you get complaints because of dust. You get complaints because you're spraying and they have a smell. You get complaints for odd hours of traffic. It's not a nine-to-five job for us. We're just starting to see more and more of that. You may not notice quite as much if you're in a rural setting, but as you get closer to the urban centres, they're encroaching on us. I think there is a right to farm here, to a certain point, and we need to be protected or get away from all these problems and let us do business.