I'm a young guy, and I don't have so much experience, but one of the things that surprised me is this idea of a general quota or a collective quota. I was thinking about the fact that if we have an individual quota per boat, each boat is going to take more time to kill the animals. Let's say that there are 1,000 seals per boat to kill, so it is going to take several days to pick up the good animals and take the time to do the proper job in the proper manner. But if you are in competition with your neighbour or your brother on another boat, you know that if you don't kill as many seals as he does in a short period of time, you're not going to make as much money as your neighbour.
So all these guys are always rushing. And at the front, sometimes the seal season is just one day long. I don't know why we call it a season, because it's a seal day. Really, it's just a rush, and when I'm doing something in a rush, I always make mistakes. I think that probably if people had less stress on their shoulders and less pressure on their shoulders to kill as many seals as possible--that's the idea of the competition--we would reduce the mistakes.