And then the thing just kinda started an honest, good positive growth because a man, excuse me, named Murray Fowler, a veterinarian out at Davis Veterinary School in California, decided to publish the first reference book. And that was underwritten by Morris Animal Foundation. And Murray also started cranking out zoo veterinarians, they created a sort of internship program. I think they worked with the Sacramento Zoo as one of their labs next door to them near there. And so I think the Zoo Veterinary Group today are formalized about, I’m guessing 10 years ago, maybe give or take maybe 15 years the way time has gone, that they formed an actual board, so that the American Veterinary Medical Association legalized the boarding of zoo vets, such as our zoo vet at Lincoln Park today, Catherine Gamble is a board-certified zoo doctor. And just this past year I saw on the journal they had one at Brookfield also, Tom never went through that, but another doctor up there did the same. So these people now are highly trained, highly skilled, wonderful reference material. And they’re practicing a level of veterinary medicine at the zoos and aquariums because the marine mammal people and the marine medical people now are the same level of material, and background, and excellence, and it’s all very good, I’m happy to see this.