The only thing I'd add is that GPS guidance is the backdrop that started the quest for guidance and zone control, and now we're also into site-specific farming where prescriptive nutrition plans will automatically control different fertilizers as we're going up and down the field. The allows us to prescribe a site-specific nutrition plan.
We also have the innovation of that hybridization of canola. That's been one of the greatest advancements in my farming career, basically being able to make canola an Olympic athlete, expressing in its genetics once a year. That's what you've seen in the lift of the ability. Corn is a hybrid, and other crops around the world are hybridized, but the hybridization of canola has been huge.
I want to mention how we price our stuff. Farmers don't take their bucket of canola to the elevator to see what they can get. It's a strategic cash flow plan. Incorporated into that is the use of things like the Winnipeg ICE futures canola contract where we have mechanisms to defer price risk. We have the ability to do that as well.
That is where we're looking at the future. The canola market does not look good in the futures markets right now; it's based on a lot of risk.