Shalatas live in areas like that, high in the mountains where its cold and shalatas are happier probably out in the snow than they are out in the 85 degree or 95 degree day in the summer and if you see them in Ethiopia, they’re in groups and they are all close to each other but they’re not intermingling. That was what I was hoping we could do in New York and worked out we had two groups one male and a bunch of females. Then there was another bunch of females. Then we hand a bunch of males that were together in a third group and we got them in two groups. I don’t know how well they are doing but I think they are breeding and raising some shalatas. Soon as they gave them to us, they’ve been breeding red shalatas, they wouldn’t have given them to us. They said because they weren’t breeding for them, they wanted to send them some place else where maybe they can do better. If they can do better, you can make better use of the space those shalatas were occupying.