Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I have to admit that I'm a tried-and-true maple syrup addict. I love it. I've been here for 20 years and anything I've done in Parliament does not hold a candle to the fact that I make the world's finest French toast. You put some butter on that and drizzle some really good maple syrup, a couple of thick slices of bacon, and there is nothing finer that I could create. I did some last weekend, and I had some really good maple syrup that my wife found somewhere. It was delicious.
It's good to hear the passion that you have for the quality of your product and keeping the quality control of the product. I think we have to make every effort that we, as parliamentarians, can make to help secure that country name of “maple” for your products—in the same way as the shiraz people secured it. We can't use the name shiraz or champagne, as Mr. Zimmer mentioned. We have to do that. It could be one of the finest marketing tools we could imagine.
I want to ask you, what would the average-sized or medium-sized maple syrup farm produce? How many litres would it produce in a year?