I think it's a question of adaptation with the farming community.
I keep telling this story, but both my colleague and I were at a farm show, and one of the sales guys said that if we were going to do precision farming, the first thing we would have to do was a soil test. It took three years for that particular person to get a soil test done.
The guy would put fertilizer across the whole land because his old man did it and it was the way he'd been taught. It produced good yields. In that third year, he found that, oops, maybe he didn't have to spend all that money to put fertilizer everywhere, and he finally adopted precision farming.
That tells me that a lot of education still needs to be done. Any recommendations on what we can do as a committee to ensure this information is out there would be helpful— and I'm cut off.