Probably one of the comments in particular that we would have is that P.E.I. has moved into the Japanese market. There's quite a bit of interest there. We would like to see some value added there.
One of the things we tried was a local crop of buckwheat. That's going to be exported to Japan. Now, rather than export the raw product, I do believe that we need a mill right here in Prince Edward Island, or somewhere in the Maritimes, that could process it. Then we'd ship the finished product. As for whether the crop is ever going to be successful, this is only the second year that it has been grown here. It looks interesting.
The other thing we're doing is that probably about 20% of our soybean acreage is grown for the Japanese market by a company from Ontario that has invested here with a plant in eastern P.E.I., but again, as a crop that's processed, it has to be shipped to the Port of Halifax. That does not put a whole lot of pressure on at harvest time, because they process it through the whole year, so that's a bit of a help there too.