Good. I've got you figured out.
Part of the discussion we're having here on land and resources, and the availability of land, will probably be critical to all of your futures. Quite a few years ago I was a young farmer; now I'm just cranky.
You really have a great career path. You have some huge opportunities. There are two things that I think are critical to what you're doing. You touched on both of them, but I'd like a little more explanation on how critical you feel it is.
The first one is accessibility to property, especially to rich agricultural land versus that land being turned into suburbia. That's number one. Ontario has a farm belt, with protection for a lot of that rich agricultural land, and Nova Scotia has protection for some of it but not all of it.
The other thing you touched on was your work with the American young farmers group. I really feel that's critical to your future success, especially in commodity groups and especially in international trade. I was in the Christmas tree business for 25 or 30 years as a medium-sized grower. We exported all of our product into the United States. I can tell you that the only way we succeeded in that was to become members of the national Christmas tree growers association in the U.S. It meant that we therefore had a seat at the proverbial table; we had a vote on everything they voted on, and we were able to have somebody there to actually counterbalance the innate protectionism that Americans are vaccinated with when they're born. On numerous occasions when we had trade wars with the States—shakes and shingles, and a number of others—we were able to keep Christmas trees out of it. It wasn't a big deal for them, because we're about 8% of the American market: they're 95% of our market. That's a huge difference, right?
Anyone can jump in, but I just want you to expand on those two thoughts.