Not that I can remember. I don’t remember a zoo experience, you know, in my younger years, so, no. Well, so it leads me to ask, when did you decide, and why did you decide “I wanna be a veterinarian?” Well, that’s kind of an interesting story is, as I mentioned, I grew up on a ranch outside of Bakersfield, and there were two agricultural schools in California, San Luis Obispo, Cal Poly at San Luis Obispo, and University of California at Davis. And I didn’t particularly wanna go to San Luis Obispo, and I went, decided I wanted to try to go to Davis, and so went up there to apply for admissions, and went in, and sat down, and they asked me what I wanted to do for a major. And I said, “Well, really, I don’t know.” I said, “I’d like to just go in classified, take a few courses, decide what I wanted to do and do that.” “No, you have to take a major.” I said, “Really?” They said, “Yeah, if you gonna enter a college, you have to take a major.” I said, “Well, okay.” I said, “Well, I’ll take engineering”, because they just put Sputnik up then, and they were just screaming for engineers everywhere, and I did enjoy mathematics. And so they handed me the curriculum. It was 18 units of physics, calculus and everything in the first semester I said, “No, I don’t wanna be an engineer.” She said, “Well, that’s the fastest change of major I’ve had in a long time.” So then I said, “What else?” And so finally they got down alphabetically to veterinary medicine, and I said, “Okay, let me see that.” And it was history, English and a bunch of electives, which was basically undeclared. And so I said, “Okay, I’ll take that” and I figured I would be used, you know, not going anywhere.