And John, who had the resources at the time, John, John ran a, a, a very major poultry, national poultry industry. And, and that’s where he made his money. But he had the resources at the time to start bringing in through quarantine because the, the problem is with the uk it’s not a problem. It’s quite right that they do that very strong quarantine laws about, and particularly about who stopped because of worries over foot and health disease and, you know, and lots of other particularly tropical things. So animals had to be quarantined most of the time in Scandinavia, in Denmark, Aalborg in Denmark were major sort of quarantine facilities, even some of the main, main European countries who had pretty tough laws about bringing animals in directly from Africa or Arabia. And so over a period of years through quarantine, mostly in, in Scandinavia, we built up about 20 species, including things like horned orx and adx and you know, a number of rare species, which we now, the UK zoos have played a major role in reintroducing back into North Africa. And that was, and then of course we ran outta space. So whipsnade and whip, the collection at Whipsnade and Mar were more or less being jointly managed in a, in a species, you know, in a species genetic sense.