Okay, that's great.
I wanted to wade in on the discussion on cheese allocation between the Dairy Farmers of Canada and the Retail Council of Canada.
Yves, one of the things we recognized early on was that there had to be a mechanism so new entrants would get a definite percentage of the cheese coming in to fill the supply lines you're talking about, and also then look for the larger distributor. It's 30% and you just made that comment, Yves, that if we had at least 30%, we could.... You have it. It's in the document. I don't see any reason that it would ever be changed, so it's a matter of making those agreements and getting the distribution.
You're absolutely right that producing cheese and having access to that cheese will help you form your own distribution network. I know that at the last Paris show, a number of cheese manufacturers from Quebec and Atlantic Canada were winning awards and signing contracts. We have unlimited access back to Europe, and those kinds of awards in your hip pocket are a great way to start that distribution system over there with 500 million potential consumers.
I just wanted to point that out.
On the mukluks, that's a fantastic story, Josh. I've seen some of your product, and it's top-shelf. I think it's a tremendous opportunity to have the intergenerational transfer of culture and stories. You talked about the Storyboots; the beading on them is phenomenal. They're certainly worth $2,000 when you look at the time frame it takes to produce them.
There's a tremendous demand for that type of cultural, historical type of thing, in Germany especially. It's is a big part of their tourism when they come to Canada. Have you started to look at the potential of what that market would do for you?