Thanks, Mr. Chairman.
Ms. Bonsant, I have to tell you that knowing how stingy this chairman is with time, you may have wasted that one chance you were going to get. I was going to ask a question quite similar to what you just did, so you could have saved yourself.
Thank you all for being here--on short notice, I understand. We certainly appreciate that. It's always good to have young folks here to speak with us. I have to say that had I been your age speaking to a parliamentary committee, I would have been quite nervous. If you are, you certainly aren't showing it, so good job.
I have two questions. I'll ask the first one and then ask you to answer it as quickly as you are able to so that we can get to the second one and we don't have this guy cutting me off and pulling the hook on me.
The first question is this. I notice both of you talked about whether there's a future in farming for yourself. One of you seems to think that you're interested in being on the farm; the other one is not so sure about that and thinks probably not. In your 4-H groups at home, and in the association you've had provincially or nationally with other 4-H'ers, would you find that this would be fairly common, that about 50:50 are interested in being in farming? Is it less than that, more than that? What's been your experience?