And it was because it had something like a plant on in its ear that could have been immobilize the animal, take 10 minutes, look, pull something out when you first saw an animal irritating it, perhaps put it on a course of antibiotics that, that could have saved its life. And, and so I think over the decades we, we learned that we learned both how to lessen the risks related with anesthesia as well as balancing what the potential problems could be. And I think the case that, the case that you’re talking about, I think is Sinbad the gorilla was a very, very high profile gorilla at Lincoln Park that it hadn’t been immobilized in many, many years and was obviously having some sort of dental issues. And in terms of risk reward, we had, we had a very competent human dentist, a fellow named Ray Coates, who we knew could get to the bottom of what was going on, if there was any dental problem, extracting teeth if needed, but, but identifying what Sinbad would need in terms of care. It wasn’t just like I was gonna go look in there and say, you know, those, those teeth don’t look that great, but I, I’m not really expert enough to figure out what to do. You know, you go into the case with an idea that the animal has a dental problem. And so you have the dentist and his assistant there on hand when you begin the procedure. And you know, if it turns out that, you know, he has an infection in his cheek and his teeth are all fine, sorry, we cost you a day coming to the zoo, but you’re prepared to, to do what you need to do in one procedure.