 Terry, good morning and congratulations on your closing of your recent private placement. What are you going to do with all this money? Going to Vegas? No, no, just joking. We're actually just going to expand our drill program from 5,000 meters to 15,000 meters. Obviously, we get it because we like what we see in the drilling. We'll start to get assays back next week and then the public will see why we always step on the gas. Well, speaking of stepping on the gas, for those of you that attended the investor talk this morning, you know we were discussing, is it too late to get in Terry because your stock has gone up 100% in the last 60 days? You know, mining stocks will grow rapidly and this is the great consideration of our time really. I think resource stocks are going to have a massive run and it's not going to be 20% or 50%. It's going to be 20 and 50 baggers and I think we'll be one of them. So I think it's early and the reason why I would say that is now we've got the money. So now we've got the money to basically go and execute the program, which was to add more resources and show we were going to become commercial. The big win in any junior mining play is when you go from being an exploration play to being perceived as a commercial play. So in the nickel sulfite space, our competitors, the basic, the commercial ones, and if you look at our pitch deck that's on our website, we have a listing of them. It started at 150 million US market cap and go up to 500 million US. I think we're like 12 or 13 million US. So we've got a long way to go because we're going to be very much in that group. And, you know, that would be a big win for our shareholders. So early days and long ways to go. I want to discuss your drilling. I also want to discuss your technology. But first, let's talk about nickel. We just did a couple of interviews on and the next World War three being over economics and the fight for resources in particular critical minerals. Let's talk about nickel. Where does nickel fall on this group of critical minerals for demand. Yeah, there's a lot of important aspects to the nickel story. So first you have what is it underpinning the nickel demand globally. So there's two major themes at work. One is, you know, basically urbanization. And what's that people moving from villages into towns, towns into cities. When you make those moves, you basically use more pots and pans, more bridges and stoves, more cars. All that uses stainless steel. Stainless steel is the underpinning of the nickel market with about 60% market share growing it. I think six or seven percent compound and growth rate before a number of years. So that's the monster. Then on the next big wave is electrification. So, you know, nickels right now, but probably as a market of about 10% for the electric sector, i.e. batters. And it's expected to grow to 50%. Well, I mean, that's, you know, you have 60% and 50%, well, that's more than 100%. And there's obviously other uses. So what's happening is that supply demand curve for nickel is really going to transform over the next several years. The next couple of years is going to be sort of around even to. But, you know, I think the sort of two, three years out starts to really get to be a supply demand imbalance and more demand than supply. So that will tend to probably support higher pricing. So we think the price point for nickel is going to be, you know, tend to the 10 to 15 dollar pound range, which will be very lucrative for nickel miners. The other aspect about nickel is that you've got. Laterites and sulfites. So laterites are generally bigger deposits, but much more complicated deposits to mine and often located in very environmentally sensitive areas. So Indonesia, the Philippines have some of the biggest deposits in the world, that right side of things. And the, it would be hard to argue if that's a clean nickel at the end of the day, given the devastation that has to take place to mine that product to make it, make it into nickel. So, so there'll be, I believe in the future, sort of almost an ESG view as to the nickel where you're getting it from in consumer products, especially cars. So it's one thing, you know, I think, you know, dirty nickel will find its way into stainless and will almost be unobserved because it's in everything and it's very hard to pinpoint. There's no real, but in cars, if Ford has made a deal and it's buying green nickel and somewhere in North America and GM as an example is not GM is buying dirty nickel from Indonesia. Ford's going to point that out in a massive program and the consumers are going to know. So that's going to, you know, dampen demand for GM cars. I'm just using this as an example. I'm not saying that's happened, but I'm just saying this will happen if the car companies don't buy properly, they will get damaged. And then the second thing is because of the inflation reduction act in U.S. There's very specific incentives for North American vehicle manufacturers to get to a certain percentage of North American content in their vehicles starts at around 40% that goes to 90. By the time our mind would be, you know, operational, it will be at 90 and you will not be able to have a car acquired in North America and get a full subsidy if you don't have North American nickel. And there's just not enough of it. So this, this development of a North American nickel mine, especially when that would be super, you know, a high percentage and very green. You know, we can speak about that later, but, you know, it will be highly sought after in our view. So, so North American nickel will have, I think bifurcated pricing and actually speaking on that topic in London at the World Mining Conference in about two weeks. High grade nickel. Just, if you wouldn't mind giving us an update on the drilling program and talk about the, the competitive advantage of your particular nickel. Yeah, so, you know, historically, it had a nickel equivalent grade of about 1.5, 1.6% nickel, nickel price to use. You know, so, you know, that's quite high in this world today. And we think we'll be able to maintain that or enhance that as we go forward. And some of the other deposits you're seeing, you know, in Canada are lower grade, higher volume. So the challenges are on two fronts. One, the carbon footprint for mining the bigger deposits become more of a challenge. Although there is some interesting technology that suggests that the nickel tailings of certain deposit types, including ours, could be carbon offsetting, which is sort of cool. We're definitely exploring that. The other thing is, is that from a capital perspective, it takes, you know, probably a mine like ours to develop it would cost 250 to 300 million US is sort of our rule of thumb, taken from, you know, looking at talent metals, something similar for ours. What's good about our project is we're looking across the road, literally, from a major hydrobex substation. So, obviously, powering with hydroelectricity will be, you know, powered by water mix makes us, you know, wrapped in the green flag. So that would be fantastic. So, so I think there's some interesting sort of, you know, advantages when you're dealing with high grade nickel, you're obviously crushing less rock to get the nickel out. In our case, we'd have a small sort of open pit and then decline so fairly minor footprint. So there's a real benefit from an economic thing and we could probably return IRRs, we're thinking in the 40, 50% range. Obviously, our PDA will speak to that, but that's sort of what talent was that we think would be something similar. So, so those tend to be more attractive to finance and develop versus the latter rights which cost maybe a billion and plus to advance and have lower IRRs like in the low 20s. So, you know, different times, different strokes and ultimately the nickel demand is so high that possibly all these get built, but we certainly think the, the nickel sulfate mines like ours will get advanced first because of the higher economic returns. So Terry, thank you so much for joining us today and congratulations on your series of excellent news and your outstanding performing power nickel stock. Thank you. Thanks for having us Tracy. Have a great day. Cheers.