Well, it was probably at that time, largely just cleaning it up, getting rid of some things that had become too numerous, too common and we really started working with things that needed to be worked with from a conservation and avicultural standpoint. I can remember even importing birds from the Wildfowl Trust in England, maybe 30 or 40 new birds, new stock to get this started. The pheasant collection needed the buildings, the aviaries needed to be all cleaned up. And so, those kinds of things and as you improved each of those, then it made a big difference in the results that you wanted to get. So, we had to create better holding spaces. We had did a lot of horticulture work in terms, particularly in that large aviary and getting plants in there so that the ambiance was more suitable as an exhibit and for the birds themselves. They didn’t really have very good perching spaces in many places. So, it was a long task and 1979, we totally renovated the birdhouse.