That's a great question. Again, this is not the first crisis we've seen. The big difference is that working capital has almost tripled since I started farming in 1996, so the costs and the risk that we're putting out in the fields every year are significantly impacted. In terms of the talent for risk and financial knowledge and agronomy, all the stakes are way higher now than they were then. I think there's a bigger playing field now. You have to have an appetite for risk; I get that. But you also have to have a knowledge of how to mitigate risk.
What we don't need is uncertainty in our markets, because that's the one thing we ask of our government, to have stable trade relations. The risks we're willing to assume have to do with weather and commodity prices—that's the game of farming—but we need stable market access.