If you’ve ever been out in a National Park like the Kruger National Park, there are a lot of lions, there are a lot of leopards. Even although these are highly experienced trackers that understand which way to walk, and where to walk, and how to walk into the wind and not with the wind, it’s still a daunting task for anybody. So typically what happens is we would integrate a drone unit with an anti-poaching unit. Poachers are creatures of habit. They have entry and exit points into the various parks. So we would then go out probably eight o’clock in the evening and we’d basically stay there right up until sunup the following morning and we would go and plot a grid and we would fly and patrol that grid looking for a possible incursion. If an incursion is detected, the first thing that happens is that the drone is placed into a holding pattern, or a loiter pattern, and we would simply loiter in the radius at an altitude that keeps us working in a stealthy manner. We would have no navigation lights turned on during this process. And we would be watching the activity of the poacher on the ground. And at the same time, the drone team, that consists of a sensor operator and a pilot, would radio in and start giving coordinates to the anti-poaching unit. The best result is that the poachers are apprehended and are arrested and end up in the court case. And with a bit of luck, they’re prosecuted for doing this. Sometimes, there can be a firefight and the poachers will return fire and there can be a gunfight and there can be fatalities. I mean, that happens. It’s not always like that, but probably 30% of the time, that’s real.