Not officially, and I will admit that's not something we've had a great deal of time to look at because we've been so wrapped up in the Canadian Wheat Board campaign and the supply management. Here's what's happening in the Wheat Board, and it's going to roll over into supply management.
Let's assume my husband and I wish to sell our farm to our children. First of all, they can't afford to buy it because of land costs, machinery costs, and we can't afford to sell it to them at a price they could afford to purchase it at because of the incurred debt over the last 20 years of our farming operation. I'd say that's certainly in supply-managed sectors, where quota has such an increasingly high price attached to it. For most dairy farms in my province, which is a small province where the average herd size is 80 to 100 cattle, the price tag on the quota alone could be $1.5 million to $2 million. You'd have to be crazy to want to buy into something like that, and as a mother, I'd have to be crazy to want my sons or daughters to go out and try to finance that by borrowing the capital.
So it's available, but not really.