Here's a more realistic take on LN - they don't make that much profit and aren't going to overextend themselves to their detriment or the detriment of their employees.
We saw this once before when woodcraft wanted to make demands about their production volume, etc, and guaranteeing supply. LN eventually expanded, but TLN made the comment about expanding in a sensible way.
Some of this may be temporary, and some may not be temporary, but LN is in Maine in the US and their virtues aren't the same as other folks who want to grow real fast, extract as much as they can from a business and then either let it fail or sell as long as they got theirs. Maine is almost like stepping back in time 100 years in some ways once you get north of portland. Some of the hotels there still only take reservations over phone.
The real problem here is that the money supply shot up over the last two years and the demand has, too. Realistically, if they have 80 or 90 employees and are selling what they make, a 10% increase in business puts a strain on supply. However, they go short on production and I'll bet demand around the entire world has doubled, but it may be temporary. The only way they can afford some bloated fast expansion with a nasty loan overhead is to raise prices significantly or decrease the cost of what they're making (import it). It's not the way things go in Maine. If it lasts a little while longer, they'll probably get bigger but not in a way that exposes them.