Well I’m still doing internet consultation with several of my colleagues in Thailand who I’m talking right now. They’ve got a lion they’re talking to me about, and a langer and a few other things. They send me x-rays, blood work, and we talk about it over the phone and you know, I also use Dick Montale, I’ll send things and trying to get an incorporation, get Scott Santino who I think is a superb diagnostician, even if he wasn’t one of my residents. And you know, we’re trying to stimulate them to keep talking and I’m looking at reviewing papers, when asked, and I’m looking at possibly returning to Thailand as a visiting professor in zoological medicine at the school in Bangkok, and teaching there, and then continuing doing more work, holding short courses for Thai veterinarians for elephant anesthesia and stuff, because with all the elephants they have, they’ve had hardly any exposure to how to anesthetize them ’cause they haven’t had the drugs, and they’re a little bit hesitant to do it of course, because if you’ve never done it before, it’s what we said it’s a mammoth challenge. Now you indicated that people in Thailand are sending you information, that wouldn’t have been possible 10 years ago for you to receive, technology has allowed you to extend your expertise. Yep. And … we’ll continue to expand, and that’s why I’ve continued to ask them to put their website on English, and if we can get people to do, you know, websites and put things like that, I think they’ll get contributions, not only from me, but other people that are interested, and we can set up a network like that maybe from other, from Germany, and where they also have very good, I think zoological medicine in London, and there’s Austrian, you know, there’s a lot of good information out there, and there is not a central thing yet as I am aware of on the internet where that can be brought together.