When the Midwest harvest gets into full swing and whether they'll be able to handle grain shipments then, that's going to be the true test.

We're going to have a bottleneck in the supply line, in the export line. We're going to have probably piles (of grain) somewhere needless to say, out on the ground out in the countryside.

Although there's never a good time, it's not as critical as it would be, say, six or eight weeks down the road, when there would be a flood of corn and soybeans coming down the river.

Nitrogen prices have just increased so much the past couple of years that people are considering some alternatives.

That is a good cushion going into the next crop year.