 Hi, this is Jack Lifton and today I'm talking with J.C. Poppin of Merchison Minerals and my very first question is what minerals or metals is Merchison looking to produce? First, good morning, Jack. Pleased to be here. Merchison is active in Saskatchewan looking for zinc and copper and silver with a little bit of gold. Meanwhile, the projects in Quebec, we're looking for also zinc and silver and the Baroad project and the HPM project, it's nickel, copper and cobalt. And these are all in Canada? They're all in Canada. The project in Saskatchewan is clearly in the center of the country and it's a fantastic well-run mineral positive province. And the same with Quebec where the province is very much pro-mining. So we're very happy to be operating there. It's a safe jurisdiction and we have these great projects. You're really after some very important metals that don't get a lot of play in the investor space and in particular copper is the key technology metal because you can produce all the electricity you want, but if I can't get it, it's not of much use. So the world is laced with copper wiring to transmit electricity. And I think copper is short, there's a deficit and I don't see the deficit improving because of the current revolution, alternate energy, including EVs, is upping the demand for copper something fierce and interestingly enough, of course, China now demands 60% of the world's copper and has organized itself to get that. They own or operate that copper sourcing. So we need copper very much in America and Europe. I think that's a good thing. The other thing that interests me is that silver is a very little known metal as a technology metal as a metal used in electronics, but of course it is. And it's extremely important in solar cells. So this is also unreversed. That's another good one. And I see zinc, which nobody seems to care about, but it's very important again to our manufacturing economy. And then you've got nickel and cobalt, of course, which are critical for the lithium ion battery space. So you've got a very good suite of projects. Where do you stand as far as the development of your deposits into actual producing mines? Okay. And Saskatchewan, we have the rabbit McKenzie deposit that when you look at the total resource, it's just a shade under 10 million tons of indicated than the infertile resources, basically zinc and copper and silver. Very good infrastructure. It's located within two kilometers from the main northern highway and power and community. So that's a very well advanced project. We also have a very exciting exploration plate, just one kilometer to the north of the rabbit deposit that there is. We have identified a new anomaly if you want a big conductor that has the same signature as the rabbit McKenzie deposit. In fact, this is a project that we plan on drilling this summer. The conductor that has been identified extends for 700 meters long by 200 meters deep. So that's, I could add a very significant tonnage if we're lucky and we'll have that answer literally in the next couple of months. So that's a very, very exciting project for us. The other project that's really exciting to me personally is the HPM project. That's the nickel copper cobalt. We have a crew in the field right now to follow up on a big airborne survey that was done this April. The field crew has been very successful in locating all of these conductors and sampling and I can confirm that the area is well mineralized and our team is very excited. They're collecting a whole lot of samples right now as we speak and I firmly believe that there's a very high probability that we may well find something economic on that project. Can you tell us something about your business background and the mining space which will give me confidence that your probability estimate is of high value? First background is education. I'm a geologist by education MBA. I worked as a mining investment analyst for a long time. I was a top rank gold analyst in North America. In fact, the world for a few years, I worked for Burns Fry, started Pangea Gold Fields in 2014 and sold the company to Barrick for 204 million. We found a number of gold deposits in Africa and here in Canada as well. Also titanium projects in Kenya, but we've worked pretty well everywhere. Now we have this running this company called Merchison. Great board, very well-experienced people, well-known, good reputation and very good experience so we know what to do with the assets. No, I knew your record, I had read it, but I'm very much in tune with the fact that you've got very good-looking deposits. You've got obviously extremely experienced personnel including yourself and you're on to what I think is a very much underreported need, which is for some of these basic metals. It's wonderful that we can use the rarest to make tiny magnets, but to make the car to drive to pick up the magnet, we need zinc, we need iron, we need copper and things like that. North America was once self-sufficient and I think the US is trying again to be self-sufficient, but they're talking about the high end, so to speak, the technology materials and not much thought has been given to the structural materials, the basic materials. One last question, I think is of very much importance. The US has been putting the kibosh on copper projects in Alaska and Arizona, they won't let them go. How's Canada looking at the idea of a copper project? Canada is very much pro-mining and when you look at the multiplier effect, the economic multiplying effect of mining investment, it's outstanding. For each job created in mining, there are five new jobs in the global economy. Canada is basically well known, it's got a great reputation for promoting, supporting mining and natural resources, and this is where we are. Both Saskatchewan and Quebec are top ranked in the world, an entire world has a great place to be operating. That's not to say there's no political risk, there's always political risk, it doesn't matter where you are, but it's manageable here and we have a great relationship with our First Nations, both in Quebec and Saskatchewan. We're very excited about our acid base and I'm moving forward to grow that acid base and to develop these projects into actual mines. I actually think that at the end of the day, Canada will be America's source of things like copper and zinc because it's just that much easier to do. I thank you for your service as they say. Pleasure, Jack. You're helping us and thank you very much and I'm going to be watching your company very closely. Thank you. Much appreciated.