We'd hoped that the markets would improve. That's the best-case scenario, but, yes, you look at—I don't know the exact numbers, but in our research I think in 2005 or 2007 there were 96,000 acres grown, and this year I think they're looking at 85,000.
About how I said that I didn't see a future at one point, it's because I looked at it and I said farming's kind of on its own. It's not really, but if you look at farming as any other business in any other economy, if the demand isn't there, you scale back production, right? In farming, it's harder to scale back production when you have the investment in capital and what not.
If you have a combine that can cut down 1,000 acres of barley no problem and you're only growing 500, that's a bit of an issue. That's where information-sharing comes into it with farmers. Two farmers only need one combine, instead of a combine at every farm. Things like that can help with scaling back production. I'd rather not scale back production, though.