(chuckles) Well, that’s an interesting situation because everybody that looks out of a veterinarian that ultimately works in a zoo said, “How did you get there?” And I can say really serendipitously. But I also would point out that I was prepared. When I went to the university to be on the faculty, I told myself that I wanted to maintain the scholarship, so I audited classes at the university and every one of them were involved with animals. I took mammalogy, I took ornithology, I took evolution, wildlife biology, every wildlife course over the course of years, I audited and took tests, I didn’t do it for credit because a faculty person couldn’t do that, but I had done that. And also during that same period of time, I had been working in the scout program, and I was interested in nature. I had done a minor in botany at our state university, and so I was just naturally inclined for natural history type things. And so I taught that I taught survival to boy scouts and spent a lot of time in the back country with them. So that over the course of the years, I was really prepared to enter the field of wildlife medicine because I had the medicine background, but also the biology.