Yes, I would say that there certainly are climate change pieces at play. Even in our region, we've been pushed to later plantings in the spring than we probably were when I started farming full time almost 20 years ago, and harvest goes out a little longer, but we do find that we are able to access genetics and whatnot that do survive those pieces.
I guess that having the support of the government in case there are some of those once-in-a-lifetime storms that are happening more than once in a lifetime now and having some of those backstops in place are important to our farmer members, as well as investment in some domestic production of fertilizer and fertilizer storage. Pieces like that would help alleviate a bit of the risk as we go, but also, there's working alongside farmers and seeing what they're seeing on the ground, and not having just a top-down mechanism of government, down to farmers. Work collaboratively on what they're seeing in climate change and on what can be worked on together.