The big thing is that they were a monopoly buyer, not a monopoly seller. They put out a three-bushel quota. It made it easier for the railways to keep up, because they'd put out a three-bushel quota up in Ian's area, but I wouldn't get it. Railways could concentrate on Ian's area in that couple-of-weeks stint and get the grain out of there. They did the same thing with Jeff. There was no western Canada-wide movement of commodities. They'd pick and choose and try to keep it fair for everybody so that we all starved to death. I never cleaned out my bins, not once, not ever. We always have a carry-over, even now, but not to the extent that we did then.
The first couple of years that I farmed, they never sold a bushel. I wasn't allowed to sell it to anybody else. I wasn't allowed to trade it. I had grain on the ground, and it rotted. I lost a ton of value there. They'd buy, and then they would make a deal with the grain company here to move product over there. Even when it got to their terminals in Vancouver and a boat came in, they'd say to take some from Ian's terminal, some from Jeff's terminal, and they'd move that boat here and there, to the point that some of the shippers wouldn't even come in and pick it up because it's hard on the carcass of a boat to move it out half-loaded and shove it back in again.
It was easy for the railways to keep up because they were getting little bits and dribs and drabs here and there and so on. The blending was done on the Prairies. If I hauled in a grade 2 and I wanted it brought to grade 1, they would mix in some of Randy's and bring both of us up to grade 1. They would still pay me for a grade 2, and he'd get his grade 1.
Now the blending is done mostly at port and is not done as much on the Prairies, so you have to coordinate those trains coming into the ports to blend that product. That's why 2014 was easy to do with that blunt instrument of minimums, because it was all the same. Every other year we've had low protein here and higher grades over there that we needed to move, but it's all done at port now in a different way.
With the Wheat Board gone, it made it tougher for the railways to keep up. The shippers like it, and for the most part the farmers have liked it.