There's a bit more than that too. I'm interested in the history of the fishery, and one of the things in the fishery was that the man who owned the boat and the son or second man in the boat both had the same licence. There was no such thing, at that time, as a helper's licence before, say, the late sixties or early seventies.
If Danny and I were fishing together—and I'm, by the way, better looking than he is—he would have a licence, I would have a licence. It's the same licence. So when we divided it up, when they came in with limited licences, we just jumped into two extra boats. And what happened, as anecdotal information, is that when we brought in the trap limits and we had all these extra licences, we actually had more traps in the water after we brought in trap limits than before we brought them in.
I guess we learn by doing, and I think that what we've been doing since the late sixties is paring them down and reducing the amount of effort.