Actually, most of that inventory, I understand, was gone. The buyers moved it at that price. What happens is that it's all supply and demand.
Just a week ago, the people who were holding some lobster in pounds.... Some fishermen still fish through the winter. It's just a gradual supply, not a heavy supply. Demand was high in Boston and those places.
At any rate, just last week, the people who were holding lobsters in the pounds decided that they'd better move those lobsters, because the fishermen in Southwest Nova started putting their traps in the water last week. That's how the marketplace reacts. The price dropped $1.50 a pound last week because fishermen started to put their traps in the water and the people who had pounds moved their lobster quickly. Just a little surge like that could create this all of a sudden.
From what I understand, the people who buy lobster buy very carefully and very slowly at a high price. They're scared they'll get caught. For instance, a pound in the United States lost $150,000 last week because the price dropped. That's how volatile it is.