There were, there were things, they’re, they’re mostly related to people because it’s a, it’s a people business and, you know, it’s not this indivi individual animal surgery or that individual animal surgery. But I think the, the effort that it took and the impact that the Zoo Pathology program has had is one of my proudest accomplishments. And, and on an individual basis, I, I was introduced to a veterinary student very early in her career that Dean Ted Valley down at University of Illinois thought, this is somebody that, that’s really got a passion for zoos and you really need to meet this person. And Dr. Jen Langan, you know, was a, was a vet student here and then did a, did a small animal internship. And when she was doing her residency in Zoo Animal Medicine down at the University of Tennessee, they had just recently expanded the American College’s Zoological Medicines standard for a residency program to three years from the two years that it was at Tennessee. And so I worked with some resources that I had at Loyola and University of Illinois to find funding, worked with the folks down at Tennessee to essentially have her work at Brookfield Zoo Chicago as her third year of the residency. So it can officially be a three year residency, but she finished it off here. And then at the end of that time, we knew that she was somebody that really wanted to have, as a clinician here, she had lots of expertise and drive.