 Today I have the pleasure of speaking with John Lever. John, you are a shareholder and a founder of Signature Resources and we brought you in today for something interesting. We want to talk to you as a prospector. Very proud of that title. So how did you find the Signature Resources property and how did you put this deal together? Finding the property was by chance up in Timmins, right place, right time. And the property was introduced to me back in 2003. And the property has been on my radar since 2003. It was in a position to put the financial package to acquire the property together in 2010 and introduced it to a small little public company called Signature Resources. And of course I'd like to disclose here that I personally am a shareholder at this time of Signature Resources and it was John, you're the one that got me interested in Signature and with all these gold exploration companies out there, there's gold everywhere in Canada. Can you tell me what makes Signature competitive? Poor shareholders out there looking for a gold exploration property. That's a good question because that's the challenge in developing a junior exploration property, a gold property. And it was the prompting of Walter Hanich doing his research back in 2003 saying that this property has the opportunity to develop into a big gold camp one day. And as a prospector of third generation, that's something that's very exciting and so I pursued it and I think this is going to be one of Canada's next big gold camps. We often talk to the investor intel audience about trust as the new currency and you referenced Walter Hanich and the people that you invested and what gets people interested in investing in a stock. Can you tell us a little bit more about why Walter's research was the catalyst for you getting involved in this deal? Well Walter and I were introduced each other in 2003, sorry 2001 and we worked on a very well-known mining camp called Trelani and it wasn't Trelani's at the time, it was within my family's portfolio and unfortunately our loss became somebody else's success and a very big success by Greg Gibson and of course now I am gold has that property. But Walter, I've always trusted Walter's calm nature and his expertise in the field and when he says, John you should do something about acquiring that property or at least move it to the next level, I do that. We have often spoken to people over the years too about something we call treasure hunters. There's a lot of geologists out there that have a lot of degrees and they have lots of experience but then you have those chosen few that when they see a property they like you go, aha this is a treasure hunter, would you deem Walter to be a treasure hunter? Walter is one of the most conservative treasure hunters I've ever met in my life but he is, he saw this as his golden future and being part of this project will be a long-reaching property for him and for his legacy. John, you're a multi-generational prospector. Can you tell us a little bit more about this particular property for signature and what is appealing to you about it? The appeal on this property was initially the ounces of gold that had been previously reported from drilling and little guys, little junior guys, prospectors don't come across, usually across properties like this. Usually they're gobbled up by mid-tier, larger-tier corporations and sit in their portfolios when they're ready to do development but this one here, this is probably going to be my best success story maybe to my retirement. Well John, I'd like to thank you so much for joining us today and giving us kind of a different perspective on why shareholders get involved in gold exploration companies. Thank you. Thank you, Tracy.