I mean, it’s a huge area, not 2 million, but 2000 square miles practically untouched because of civil war had really, nobody had been in that area, it was just unsafe to go into. But recent surveys show it to be pretty well unchanged over, you know, over a period of time so that the larger the area and they still exist. Yes, it is wild, but as you come in, most of these parks now are not enclosed, but they’re, they’re a very sort of defined boundary. The smaller you get, the more managed they become. So if you, if you look at, for example, the South African national parks, that national and regional park situation as, as just as one country example, most, although some of those areas like Kruger are, are vast, but there is has to be a level of management for all sorts of reasons in, you know, in, in maintaining the integrity of that area. So the, the answer is sort of yes and no. There are fewer truly wild places, but they do exist. But the smaller they get, the more managed they have to be.