 Good day everyone and welcome to this Investor Intel interview. My name is Mario Drolet. Today we have the pleasure to have with us Mr. Tom Meredith, who is the Executive Chairman of West Red Lake Gold. Bonjour Tom and welcome to the show. Thank you very much, Mario. As they say in the mining space, the best place to find a new mine is to look around past producing an old mine. So I saw that you have acquired some land position around three ex-producing mines in the West and the Red Lake camps. Can you briefly comment on the, especially on the Rowland mine, as fast as historic production on it for our viewers? Yes, we have, our property is about, I think, 31 hectares, 3100 hectares in size. It has about 12 kilometers of strike length on a major geological trend. It's located about 10 kilometers, their property is located about 10 kilometers west of the famous Red Lake mines, which were owned by Gold Corp and are now owned by Evolution Mining. And on that property, we have three former producing mines, one of which the one in red in the center of the property is the Rowland, the historic Rowland mine, which currently has a resource of about 1.1 million ounces of 7.5 grams per ton between surface and about 500 meters deep and over a length of about 1.2 kilometers. So we have exploration potential to make that bigger by going deeper, below 500 meters deep. Okay, and when was the historic production? I think that that project was primarily just an initial development project for the Gold Corp Dickinson mines that used to be called in the old days. So they didn't do a lot of production, it was just some test mining originally. What they found was the mines that were mining in Red Lake had probably a bit higher grade at the time than what Rowland had. So it made sense for them to mine right at home in their, right in their front yard, rather than go several kilometers. It's about, as I mentioned, is about 10-15 kilometers away from their Red Lake operations. But to put it in a truck, you have to go around the top of the lake and back down again. So it's about a 60 kilometer drive. Was it an open pit situation or? No, underground, underground. Yeah, just like Red Lake, the Red Lake mine is underground and the adjacent mine to it, the Campbell mine, is also underground. So most of the mining in Red Lake is underground mining. Okay, what's the depth? Well, at Red Lake mine, they're mining down to 2000 meters deep, a little bit more. Whereas at the Rowland, we've only got a resource and exploration down to 500 meters deep to get a little over a million ounces. So we think if we go to the typical mining depth of many mines in Canada go to, which is about 2000 meters, we see potential for a much bigger resource than the one million ounces that we already have. And then we have an adjacent deposit on the property called the NT zone, which looks like it has a pretty good size resource potential as well. So there's lots of opportunity to make the resource in our project quite a bit bigger than it currently is. Okay, I saw in your last press release that you have complete 16 drill holes. Probably they probably end up in the mineralization. And can you give us your latest development on this? Well, the 16 drill holes are right at the very top of the Rowland deposit. So most of the drilling had been sort of 50 meters from surface and down to 500 meters. Really most of the drilling was between 50 meters and say 250 or 300 meters deep. But we thought it would be a good idea to develop an open pitable scenario to start the mine because that makes it very easy to get ore or mineralized material into a mill because at the end of the day, mining companies buy these properties and that's how we make money for our shareholders is to sell the property, the whole company to another mining company. And so we want to make it attractive for that mining company to buy us. And when they see ore that's very easy to get, this is attractive for them. Okay, Tom, I saw on your website that your last 43-101 on their own project was in 2016, am I correct? And are you going to update it this year? Our last was in 2016. We spent the previous couple of years actually working at the the NT zone, which is a new part of the property. And so we're working on a preliminary resource there. We're going to do a little bit more drilling first. So we think next year we may have an update of the resource, which would add additional answers from the NT zone. It wouldn't make the rowing any bigger because we haven't done anything to make the rowing bigger. The work we're doing now is actually making the surface area more attractive for mining. Because as I mentioned earlier, our ultimate customer is our other mining companies who need materials for their mills. Okay, very good. My last question, Tom, to you. I saw that Equinox Gold, they own 34% of the rowing project. Have they invested in the company? Evolution Mining actually. Yes, evolution mining. They own about 34% right now. And they are new because they bought the Gold Corp assets from Newmont one year ago. And so they have for the last year been focused on the Red Lake mine operations where they have three mines and two mills in operation. And they recently bought Battle North which is right next door, which means now they'll have four mines and three mills in operation soon. So they've been focused on that. And just recently they came out to the project to have a look and see if they want to start to contribute more financing. Gold Corp was always contributing financing. Then when Evolution Mining acquired the projects, they stopped. But now they come back out to see if they're going to start again. After having spent their first year in Red Lake, getting the mine operations into bigger and better shape than they were before. Okay, very good. Last question, when do you expect your drill results to come out? Because we all know that with the COVID, the situation labs are full and kind of stuck. But do you have any guess? Or I would like to suggest all our viewers to definitely take a look at the West Red Lake Gold symbol. Richard, Larry, George, RLG on the CSC. Once again, Tom, thank you very much for your time today. And we'll be speaking in a few months. Thank you. Thank you very much, Maria. Very nice to talk with you.