I, I am not aware of any current sister zoo relationships. I think, I think as a means of connecting, connecting different cultures. I think that’s largely been supplanted by social media. I mean, there aren’t the barriers to, you know, we connect with zoos over baby hippos on TikTok. You know, there are things that can happen at a zoo in Europe that get millions and millions of hits from around the world. So I I I don’t know that, that there’s necessarily the, the benefit for our public in connecting with, you know, these folks on foreign shores because, you know, the global community is, you know, is, is basically on your phone. But from a standpoint of professional growth for keepers having exposure and from both institutions, I think, I think a lot of those things can and do happen more broadly with, you know, keeper exchange programs and other things that, that aren’t, they aren’t limited to a dialogue between two institutions, but rather rely on more regional organizations, the American Association of Zookeepers, a ZA and others to, to help facilitate transfers information transfer between institutions. And again, some of the same technological changes where, you know, we’re able to have Zoom meetings and, you know, share information on how do you, how do you train your gorillas to put their arm in a, in a sleeve to, to get blood pressure and, you know, we’re doing Zoom meetings in real times or, or sharing videos, you know, a lot of, a lot of the things that required face-to-face experience to pass along information, you know, perhaps don’t need that same level of personal contact to in order to share experience.