Well, everybody was helpful at Marineland, because it was such a small staff. We all helped each other. I mean, every Thursday morning when a fish truck would show up from the freezer plant down in San Pedro, we’d call all the areas and say, “Get your jackets and your gloves and come on up to the fish house. We’re all gonna unload together.” And that’s the way it was. If we had to do a husbandry practice or husbandry procedure or get a blood sample, and this was in the days before they were trained to present their flukes, but we would drain the water and get to four or five people. And people would always ask me, he said, “Geez, Brad, you’re the big guy. Why don’t you hold the flukes?” And, “Okay, I’ll hold the flukes.” But that’s why husbandry training became so important because we learned how to do it in a cooperative manner so the animals volunteered the behavior. And so that was important.