No. I know that it's a big challenge in our area. I was trying to think of an example. Mr. Shipley, my MP, knows the area that I come from. It's the town of Parkhill and Ailsa Craig. I grew up on a farm there and it's about a 10-mile stretch between the two towns. When I grew up in the 1960s, there was a family farm almost every 100 acres, so every farm was maybe 100 or 200 acres. I was counting up this morning how many main farm operations there are on that 10-mile stretch and it was hard to come up with five, so it's changed a lot. The commercial farmer has become very large in Ontario. Certainly, it's not when compared to Saskatchewan, in terms of the number of acres, but the average farm in Ontario is probably 500 or 600 acres of land, whereas 30 years ago, it was maybe 100 acres, so things have changed a lot. With $20,000 an acre—that's the top end, but even at $15,000 an acre—that's millions of dollars of value in farmland right now.
For someone who wants to start up a small farm, it's impossible. I really don't know how they can do it. Therefore, that is a big challenge that's being faced by all of us, but in the end, there are really two types of farmers. There's a commercial large farmer and a small hobby-type farmer, where one or both of the partners work off the farm in jobs to make ends meet.