The book in 1997 about the terrible flooding.
Yes, that's a lot of water moving through the Lake Winnipeg system and the Red River. It's amazing landscape there, with that river dropping I think four inches a mile--so it's quite a tortuous river system.
I think I also heard something in your remarks about the wetlands opportunities. This is where you're talking about science and innovation that maybe would identify areas that would not be highly productive, lands that formerly perhaps were wetlands, and finding a way to compensate for those, rather than high-value farmland, thereby optimizing use of the land and restoring habitat and water storage where possible. Is that what you meant by that, in terms of science and innovation helping to identify those things and making sure that incentives target the most appropriate land, therefore being more cost-effective?