Well, I mean, I’ll be honest, when I was running the animal department at the Highland Wildlife Park, we we’re ahead of our, our sister and, and more senior partner, the Edinburgh Zoo in starting, you know, keep it for a day programs or meet the polar bear, you know, you know, hand feed the tigers, that sort of thing. So we were kind of ahead of it. We, we used it as a, a revenue generator for buying kit and supporting Scottish wildcat conservation. So I think that there are zoos, I know Chester Zoo, I think they still do it. They used to from all the keeper experiences or feeding the animals, you know, you know, meet the giraffe, meet the tigers, the all the money went into a fund that paid for keepers going to zoo conferences and things like that. I think as long, I think as long as there’s a good justification and it’s done in a, a sensible way, you’re not, you know, it’s not 10 groups of people a day feeding the giraffes, you know, it’s the, it’s the, it’s, it remains a, at best, a once a day, twice a week, whatever it is, activity for that group or that individual or that species.