 Well, hello everyone. This is Byron King with Investor Intel. And today we're going to look at a company called Troilus Gold, T-O-I-L-U-S Gold. And we have the guy who runs it, Justin Reid here today. Troilus is up in Quebec. We've all heard of Quebec. And Justin, good morning, good day. Tell us and tell the viewers, what is Troilus Gold and what are you doing up there? Good morning, Brian. Thanks for having me today. Troilus Gold, well, Troilus was a past producer in northern Quebec. It operated for 14 years between 96 and 2010. It produced 2 million ounces of gold and about 70,000 tons of copper. It was operated by Inmet Mining, which you probably remember was a base metal company. And this was really their attempt to get the gold multiple as a base metal company. And you remember the days of the 80s when gold companies traded at 2x NAV and 20x Ford cash flow. And so they permitted it and put it into production. But corporately, they had copper Panama and they had La Cruces, some of the largest copper assets in the world. So corporate capital and objectives really were elsewhere. Long and the short as it was a massively undercapitalized mine, they ran out of reserve. They sent no money into the asset. And then they closed it at the end of the reserve life. We acquired it privately, took it to market in 2018, drilled a quarter million meters over the last four years, which is a huge program. And now we're sitting with 8.1 million ounces equivalent of open pitable material and our plan is to put it back into production. Oh my goodness, you've opened a book here, a book with many pages. So we're in Quebec and it's an old base metal, precious metals play for people who maybe aren't as familiar with Quebec geology as you are. I've been there a few times. Lots of Precambrian and all sorts of falting and what have you. Give a real quick overview. Why is that gold and why is all that metal there? What happened? Did somebody hit it with an asteroid or something or was there some other geological phenomenon? No, we're not quite an asteroid. You've probably heard of the Abitibi. A lot of the years have happened. The Abitibi is one of the most prolific gold belts in the history of the world. Over 200 million ounces produced in countless number of mines. We're in the Frotet Evans Greenstone Belt, which is just the name of the geologic domain. It is the exact same rocks, exact same age, exact same metamorphic grade or structural level of structural complexity as the Abitibi. The only differences were located 250 kilometers to the north and we're buried by 20 meters of glacial sand and till and gravels. The Abitibi was exposed. It was easy to find gold and copper. It was easy to explore. We were far more difficult because we're buried. You had to look below it. To look underneath this cover, you have to use geophysical techniques and geochemical techniques. 50 years ago, they weren't as advanced as they are today. We've got control of this for the Frotet Evans Belt. We have 1,400 square kilometers and we're putting modern techniques to work with great success. That's the beginning of a fabulous story. We've heard this before with other companies. You've got very little in the way of outcrop, but you've got 20, 30 meters of glacial outflow and everything, which could be anything. In my experience up there, the absolute bedrock could be doing this, but the surface is flat as a pancake and trees and lakes and all that sort of thing. You've done geophysics. I heard the number 250,000 meters of drilling. That's a lot of meters. It's a lot of meters. Have you put into exploring this thing? Over a hundred million? Over a hundred million dollars, a quarter million meters of drilling, but we inherited an underground resource at Troilus. That was all that was left of about 1.5 million ounces. We are now sitting with 8.1 million ounces equivalent, all open pitable over a strength length of eight kilometers. We have five drills turning now and we're drilling between seven and 10,000 meters a month as we speak. Holy smokes. When you mentioned the number eight million ounces, that's a tier one asset that any large producer would absolutely look at. Do you have, shall we call them, visitors to your site looking at things? Well, let me put it this way. Of course we do. Whether you like Troilus or not, you can't have 8 million ounces in Quebec without everybody at least having an opinion. And so, yeah, we're a busy place both with our team. We have a 100-man camp and yeah, we have lots of visitors come through. Shareholders come through and the Frottad Evans spelled as a whole is really becoming quite an active place. We have Seona Lithium out of Australia to the south of us. They have the Maudland spodumene deposit. Sumitomo basically surrounds us on an exploration side. So, lots of activity up there right now and it's great that we had first mover advantage. Absolutely. So, Troilus Gold, tell us a little bit about the company itself, your share structure, who are some of your major holders, analyst coverage, things like that. Give us a rundown on that, please. We have just under 200 million shares out. We're about 170 million dollar market cap right now, unfortunately, but I think that's the opportunity. We have both 30 million dollars in the bank. We're very well capitalized. My background really is on the institutional side of investors after I'm a geologist by training. So, we're about 60% institutionally held and our largest shareholders include investment Quebec, the case, fund solitaire de Quebec. All the large Quebec-based government-run pension funds are our largest shareholders. In fact, own almost 20% of our company. Our management team owns just under 10% of our company and then the large global resource funds. So, Franklin, Ruffer, Sprott, really well held. We have 58 institutions that own our name and then about 30% retail. So, for retail out there who may be watching this video, where would they find your shares to trade and what exchanges? We trade on the TSX Bigboard under ticker TLG. We trade over the counter on the OTCQX and we trade in Frankfurt as well. To your earlier question, we have seven analysts that cover us right now from the various brokers. So, well covered by the street. Right. So, you're a significant size in terms of market cap. The 8 million ounces, have you pretty much finished your exploration and you're moving into a development phase or is there more to explore? Are you in that sort of zone between advanced exploration early development? And there's those curves that people, the La Sonde curve. The La Sonde curve. And I follow the La Sonde curve and I believe in it. First of all, our 8.1 million ounces, we put out almost two years ago. We have since drilled 125,000 meters. So, we'll have a new resource out in July and expect growth to continue significantly. So, I'm meaning like two months from now. Two months from now, exactly. We put out a PEA two years ago as well, our pre-feasibility, which is really a major technical event, but also kicks off our permitting, which is underway. We'll come out about the same time. And we're envisioning a 35,000 ton a day operation for 25 years, producing 250,000 ounces of gold a year plus about 25 million pounds of copper. It's going to be a top five in Canada. It's going to be the third largest gold mine in Quebec and probably it will be the largest copper producer in Quebec. However, five drills are still going. We haven't shut off the ore bodies. And it's a cliche when a CEO says, oh, we're open in all directions. But I use the term, it's not that the in-met, the previous operator did bad work. They did no work. And it's because corporate objectives were elsewhere and that happens all the time. So we're systematically moving along the belt, expanding the ore body. We don't need more ounces, we need good ounces. And so we have a major regional exploration program underway, which I think will help mitigate the impact of that boring development cycle that we have in La Sance. So we're going to have more discoveries. We're going to have exciting news. We're always going to have news to the market while we engineer and go through the less sexy stuff. Well, thank you so much, Justin. We wish you well. We wish Troll as well. And safe operations. And one last thing, COVID is so over. I mean, everybody's been saying, oh, COVID, COVID, we can't do this. Yeah, right, COVID, it's over, man. I was on an airplane and I wasn't wearing a mask and I was loving it. It's time to get out there and start to do real things. And so get out there and do real things, both yourself and all the people out there watching this, it's over. It's time to get moving and get the world moving again. So a company like Troll is, boy, I'm glad we could have this talk. Thank you, sir. Thanks, Brian.