Yes, exactly. You're in the GTA. I'm down in Niagara, so my eggs are probably reaching the grocery store and you might be buying the eggs from my farm.
In the domestic supply that we have in Canada, the average-size family farm is about 30,000 laying hens. In the U.S., you're talking four and a half million birds. There are 50 companies in the U.S. that control over 95% of the production in the U.S. Their average production is about 330 million layers a year. We have 30 million layers in Canada, obviously because of the difference in population.
When you take a look at the environmental impact, the carbon footprint, we have a much smaller carbon footprint. We have a much smaller environmental impact. We follow the same animal care program from coast to coast in this country. That's every farmer. We're not competitors against each other. We work together as a family to supply the market, because we have a cost-of-production formula that we can use.
During this recent bird flu outbreak, egg prices in the U.S. reached six dollars a dozen. In Canada, they never got there. I have family members in the south who said, “How come egg prices are so expensive?” I said it was because of bird flu. They had 18% of their production affected by bird flu. We had 4.6% of our production affected, and the difference is due to smaller farms and in being able to control our biosecurity better than those large farms. When a large farm goes down and you have three and a half million birds you need to repopulate, imagine the size of the hole you're digging in the ground to bury all those birds. When you talk about environmental footprint, have a little picture of that.