Actually, in our desert, the evenings in which anybody would ever want to come to the park time of day is just as hot as the day because the day just gets hotter and it doesn’t cool off. Sometimes it never cools off, but it doesn’t cool off out there until like two or three in the morning. So, the best time you’re gonna do programming to avoid the heat is early morning, not evening, evening is just still as hot, I mean. So, and then we also, because we were in a natural area doing nighttime program, we do it, but doing nighttime nature walks added the extra excitement of literally coming across rattlesnakes and things like that. So, we had to be a little more cautious, but we tried opening early because for the first few years we closed all summer long. We were only open nine months of the year because it was too hot and we had essentially, other than one little tiny exhibit hall, we had no indoor facilities for people to get out of it. So, we would close in the summer because our summers average 115 degrees Fahrenheit during the day, so. Visitors turned into little squishy ink blots on the sidewalk, which your insurance company prefers not to have happen in that kind of temperature.