 Today I have the pleasure of speaking with Frederick Kozak from Appia, Rare Earths and Uranium. How are you today Frederick? Very well. Thank you, Tracy. Great to see you again. Well, allow me to start by congratulating you. Your most recent results, I think, are definitely an understatement. Would you not agree? Yes, I would. It's really quite remarkable what we are learning at Alsace Lake and it just gets better and better. All right. Well, we started with assay results and discovery of a significant new mineralized zone at Alsace Lake. So what is that significant zone and what does it mean? So at Alsace Lake, Tracy, we've got some very high-grade Rare Earths on surface in the WRCB area. And so we did quite a bit of drilling last year. We drilled 55 holes, 5,000 roughly meters out of the 8,000 meters we drilled in total on the claims block. And to our surprise, pleasant surprise, we have found another zone of Rare Earths. And we're calling it the AMP zone. And our news release, unfortunately, was quite technical, relatively speaking. But it is a zone of lower-grade Rare Earths. But the good news is we've penetrated it with every single drill hole that we put into the WRCB area. And more importantly, it is known thickness of 10 meters or more everywhere underlying what we have drilled at WRCB. So it is really something quite significant. And more news to come because we're drilling right now at Alsace Lake. We've been drilling there since mid-March. And we're drilling on another project that's a kilometer and a half away that looks like something similar to this AMP zone, but much, much thicker. Well, stay tuned on that. We've got assays to come. So, Frederick, I think if I hear you correctly, the last news release I was going to ask you that question was indeed quite technical. You found a second zone of Rare Earths. But if I also understand correctly, they're still very near the surface. Is that correct? This new zone, the AMP zone, starts at surface and is visible on a relatively constant dipping plane under the surface. And yeah, it's not something that we were expecting to find. But the assay results have shown us we've got something very interesting here. And so, for those of you out there in the race to Rare Earths production, actually, I think someone mentioned to me that the new theme should be sprint to Rare Earths production. How is Appia doing presently? Well, we are in the middle of our largest ever drilling program at Alsace. Like we've talked about being able to drill 12,000 to 20,000 meters this year. We started drilling in March, as I mentioned, and we're going to have an update on our drilling progress, hopefully in the next week or so. And that will really give investors a good idea of how we have been progressing. We're very pleased with what we're finding. Just to recap, I mean, the Alsace Lake claims block has 27 square kilometers of high-grade Rare Earths mineralization on surface. So there is something very important and very large going on here. And we've been working there since 2017 drilling started in 2018. We're on the verge of finding, well, we are finding things that are going to be very valuable in the, as you said, the sprint to Rare Earths and Rare Earths metals in the Western world. And of course, in addition to that, you know, we're actually working on panels for PDAC. You're going to be at PDAC, right, Frederick? Absolutely, yep. And at PDAC, I was working on some panels for the Investor Intel Media booth. And I'm like, Rare Earths, because we'd love to talk about Rare Earths, of course, at Investor Intel. But we also love Uranium and you have five mineralized projects, right? Yeah, we've got four in Saskatchewan, all mining block claims that APIA has held for a period of time. One of them we relinquished and then added back last year. And don't forget the historic Elliott Lake Camp Uranium project that APIA is also holding that was, oh gee, Elliott Lake has seen, the area has seen 300 million pounds of U308 produced historically. So that's also part of the Uranium portfolio at APIA. So you're almost too good. You've got too many good things. You've got Rare Earths that people are talking about. Jack Lipton often tells me you have the best monazite in North America or Rare Earths. We heard this from a few sources. And of course, you have Uranium projects as well. And we all know in a Uranium bull market. So what are you going to be touting at PDAC? Yeah, Tracy, we will be at PDAC. And if you'd like to have a meeting with myself or our CEO, Tom, drive us, we'd love to meet with you. Send me an email fcozacapiaru.com. And you can also see our email addresses in our news releases on apiaru.com. Well, Frederick, as always, it's a pleasure. Again, congratulations on your most recent assay results. I have to confess that it was Jack Lipton that talked me through them. And I think he actually used the term blockbuster. So congratulations. And thank you so much for an update on APIA, Rare Earths and Uranium. Thank you very much, Tracy. See you at PDAC.