We operate in 40 different communities across Canada, but what's unique about our program is that it's delivered locally, so the local committee led by farmers makes the decisions on what occurs on the Norfolk sand plain, for instance, and they do locally appropriate things.
One thing that is very popular here is the restoration of tallgrass prairie on our lands. A lot of people forget that tallgrass prairie was native to this landscape. By returning it to the sand plain.... We get great efficacy by putting this extremely deep-rooted and drought-tolerant plant back on our landscape for biodiversity and for building soil health and water quality. That's is a really great example.
We also work a tremendous amount on erosion control, creating the structures that protect our highly and easily erodible sand plain. We create the structures so that our gullies and fields don't wash into the cold water streams and into the watercourses. Thereby, we get protection for the cold water streams and the trout habitat there, and of course downstream against algae blooms in the Great Lakes.
Those are two of the things that are unique to what happens in Norfolk because of the sand plain that we operate on.