And I want it to be close to the exhibit.” And that’s how we developed even the walkthrough any exhibit. I would build out of artificial rock crevices with glass in a just so big for one child to stand in. So that that little kid could be right there facing this fishing cat or whatever he was looking at. And it seemed to work and the people loved it. Because I had such a small zoo with main walkway going right along, you couldn’t have a walkway more than 30 feet wide in our zoo in San Antonio, because we didn’t have the room between the cages and the river. So I had to build everything so that it took up part of the rock quarry and left me that little 30 foot path to get emergency vehicles and zoo vehicles around. And how I did it was, I would take them into the rock area and bring them back out to the main walk so they felt like they worn themselves out by the time they got through the zoo, when really it’s only like 18 acres of viewing space in that entire central zoo.