All of us walking down the street coming here were saying that we should be in the woods hunting pheasants today—all of us. So yes, you're right on.
The commercial aspect of losing the fishery on the east coast, as Mr. Simms also knows, has been devastating. It has hurt a lot of our small communities. A lot of these small communities, though, have found ways of utilizing angling and other aspects of wildlife to get back into it. For instance, there are fishermen taking tourists on whale-watching tours and bird-watching activities. Things of that nature have helped commercially. There's still some commercialization within the trapping, of course, and we heard the numbers earlier, and some of the people have worked off into those industries.
It has been difficult, but there has been good news in the last little while. It appears that some of the stocks are starting to come back. Hopefully, that will be something we can rely on in the future, if we haven't lost our skills to catch the fish in the future. I say this because the young fishermen have now gone into computers and have disappeared from the shoreline. They're now working in Alberta in the tar sands. God knows if learning how to actually fish is going to be something.... My brother-in-law is a lobster fishermen in P.E.I. He sold his equipment last year. He had four sons and none of the sons went into the fishing industry.
Thank you.