Well, I mean, we came into the Arabian Oryx re-introduction program, I knew it was going on because I was, at that point had already computerized the studbook. And so, we were looking at animals from reproductively as to who could go back, what animals were overrepresented in our populations and so forth. And so, but animals had already started to be shipped back. San Diego was the staging ground for most of the North American animals that were going there because they had all the equipment, the manpower, the money to do all the testing and so forth and so on. After there had been several animals going back, including some that had wound up coming out of our herd at Living Desert, Jim, there was a special meeting of Arabian Oryx holders in Oman and primarily they were, it was San Diego, but it was also some of the other countries from that area, Jordan in particular, and being held in Oman, and I was to go out and actually see the animals in the field. And so, I was invited to be able to go along on that. And that was for me, just the most fabulous experience to be out in Oman and the edge of the Empty Quarter and seeing Oryx in the wild and realizing that it’s possible to do this for some species at least, and hoofstock definitely. And we had some animals go back there.