Some of ’em were, well first we went to collect sperm from elephants, because as we used to say, that was a mammoth problem. But then we started doing things like, I’d have an elephant down, and we studied must in elephants, you know, the … And we’d find one in must and then give it a hormonal treatment and then come back in 72 hours, and see how the hormones, testosterone, well, I had the feeling that if we had to anesthetize the animal twice, a major animal, let’s find out more. So we’d give it antibiotics, at the first time, a dose of antibiotics and then measures the level of antibiotics when we got it in 72 hours, and we got a nice paper published on how much antibiotics it takes to maintain a blood level at 72 hours in elephants, because we did enough elephants on one study to get another paper on the antibiotic pharmacokinetics. So that was, we tried to dovetail as many studies like that as we could. Was there, you’d mentioned the giraffe that was a little more difficult to deal with in a natural setting than in a zoo setting.