Sure.
For those of you who are not from British Columbia, we've had a large infestation of the mountain pine beetle that peaked in the 2004-2005 time frame. That timber is getting to the end of its useful life. We've been spending a lot of time moving that wood out as quickly as we possibly can. The result is we had an uptick in our annual allowable cut in order to bring that out as quickly as possible, but now we will have a reduction in AAC, or annual allowable cut, as we move forward.
What that does is force mills to go farther afield to feed themselves. They have to travel greater distances, which means the hauling costs are higher. They're also moving into places where the economics of bringing that wood out are not as good, so as we are moving farther afield, our delivered log costs are moving up as a result.