I would love to speak to that, thank you.
I see a deeper issue here. We're here to talk about the trains and the cashflow and cash advances and the solutions, but I would have to add that if this continues, it's not just farmers. If farmers have a very restricted cashflow, we're going to concentrate on getting a crop in and paying the basics. You're going to find that in the small towns around the prairies the restaurants are going to suffer because there's not going to be a lot of disposable income, the car dealerships, the bowling alleys, the clothing stores. Pick one, right? You will find that it is not just the farmers who will struggle if we're short on cash, not because we need a handout but because we're in a crunch of money because our product can't be sold. It is going to start affecting the entire economy. When you start seeing things like processing plants that can't get supply laying off employees, this is serious. This is a crisis that very quickly could become a catastrophe.
In answer to your question, I've heard people talk about not planting their crop. I hope that doesn't happen. I've heard people talk about planting a crop and putting very little fertilizer with it. I hope that doesn't happen. I've heard people finding very creative loans. There are a lot of people suggesting a lot of things, but it's a crazy amount of money to put in a new crop. We rely on the previous harvest to pay for it, so there are a lot of ideas being talked about. This is February. Ask me that question again in April. I'm really hoping in April we'll say, wow, did they ever come through, and all that grain moved.