This is, this is why the thousands of acres, 2000 acres that North Carolina has fortunate to have is it’s not just the exhibits themselves, it’s the, the total almost rural experience that you get around those exhibits. So, I mean, if you’ve got exhibits that are crowded together, which many city center zoos are, there’s not all this, there’s asphalt pavement between them. But actually creating the, the sort of all day environment that, that visitors really like that, that if you ask visitors to North Carolina Zoo, what they like most the day you ask them, they will say the Poe Bear exhibit or the gorillas, you ask them that same question a month later and what they will say is just a beautiful place to come to. It’s just the whole surroundings, not just the exhibits are really, really great. So space obviously plays into that as well. So I would, any, any, I would advise any zoo director today if they have the chance to buy land around, you know, if they’ve got the resources to do that, to always do that. But we have to face the reality that so many, so many of these places just don’t, there’s no way that they can expand. And if they try to, of course they often get, they often get sort of antagonistic responses from the local community.