I think that when, if you’re, I mean, and this is one thing that the American zoo community has been much better at say, than here in, in the us And that at that’s raising donor money for these facilities. I think they miss a trick in that you’ve, you’ve got your, your wealthy family who’s, who’s, you know, they’re interested in funding your, your new tropical house or your new grill exhibit or whatever it happens to be. And I think that there is the possibility to, to make them aware that there’s another way of going about this and we can take a, a good percentage of your generous donation and we can put that into a fund that’s, that’s going to support this wild population or is gonna help protect this, this poorly protected area of gorilla habitat. Or we’re going to, you know, provide conservation jobs for poachers who usually make the best park guards ’cause they know the business we’re gonna, we’re gonna fund that as well. And so I think you can do both and you don’t need to necessarily do this hugely elaborate, as I’ve already said, stage set, which is what a lot of these exhibits tend to be. You also have this unfortunate situation where the more natural it looks, then the more restricted the keepers are for providing enrichment. Because if you have this wonderful arctic diorama for your polar bears, you can’t give them a big blue plastic barrel to play within in the pool because it ruins the illusion. And I think that’s a mistake.