 Today, I have the pleasure of speaking with Greg Andrews of Search Minerals. How are you today? I'm great. Tracy, thank you. We're in the last day of PDAC and we're trying to attract cannabis investors who've made more money than they know what to do with to diversify and go into some things like rare earths. Yes. Well, rare earths are obviously the vitamins of technology and especially for the millennials. They're a big consumer of all these electronics and the new cars and electrification of vehicles and that's what's really driving our rare earth space right now. The vitamins of technology, I got to love that and of course we've had a lot of interest in our site recently, trending number one, interest in rare earths. Is the market about to turn around and explode like it did in 2010? Well, we believe it is. The electrification is what's really driving it, both from vehicles and wind turbines and back when you're talking about that spike in 2009 and 10, there wasn't any big push behind it other than, oh, maybe we'll buy more cell phones, but with electrification, it's going to really put a constraint on the supply that's out there right now and that's what Search is trying to fill that void when the time comes in the next few years. And for our new audience, we're trying to attract a rare earths. Just want to mention that currently China controls almost 90% of all produced rare earths in the world. Is that correct? That is correct. And so, you know, we've started off in 2009, the rest of the world problem and having a safe jurisdiction in Newfoundland Labrador is very key as a safe jurisdiction to produce that product for the other markets other than China. And of course, other elements that contribute to stock activity or issues of sustainability and geopolitical issues, can you tell us how rare earths play into that game? Yeah, so we look at China being an end consumer of their own electric vehicles, they're driving the force in that space and so they're going to consume their own raw materials first and so there may not be products for the rest of the world also and they're also looking to be maybe net importers of our rare earths, so they're out there looking outside the world also to ensure they have a supply for their growing needs also. And there are very few projects actually in North America, is that correct? There's projects but one thing that puts search above some of the other projects is we have a technology that allows us to be a low cost. So for a thousand tons per day production, that's 152 million, which we've always worked to make sure that that's a financeable number, you know, it's always going to be tough. But our product is scalable so we can start at a thousand tons per day, go to 2,000 and grow up instead of having to spend a large capital and have a large capital base that needs to be paid for with a large production rate. So Greg, would you mind giving us kind of a 10 story overview about the search projects? So Deep Fox, which we just announced those results last week, which we do, when we do our exploration, we do a detailed channel sample program. So that means what we see on top, we want to prove down below. So the difference between Fox Trot and Deep Fox is Fox Trot was 400 meters by 10 and Deep Fox is 400 meters by 30 meters. So conceptually that could be up to three times the size of Fox Trot. So the drilling needed to prove that that 30 meters extended down below, which it has down to the 200 meter level. So what that does for a game changer is take us from a Fox Trot 14 year life mine to possibly 25, 30 plus generational type play. And that's really excited the local communities and the both federal and provincial government. Search Minerals has got everything lined up right now. What should we anticipate as shareholders in the upcoming quarter or two, Greg? Well, our next piece of work, it's all about the Deep Fox right now. We're going to get a resource estimate on that. We're going to update our PEA from there. And what our PEA is going to do is take both Deep Fox and Fox Trot because they're in close proximity. They're 13 kilometers apart from each other. And that PEA should show those economics that we're looking for and the long term extension life of the project. From that, we will go through it, initiate the environmental stage for Deep Fox so that we have both Fox Trot and Deep Fox both going through the environmental process to get the permitting done in about two years. So we have technology, we have clean tech, and we have rare earths with search minerals. Thank you so much for joining us today, Greg. Thank you, Tracy.