 Welcome back everybody to the World Famous Mining Show. I'm Peter Clausi with Investor Intel and today we are blessed to have a new guest who I haven't met before. And your name, sir? Bobby Stewart. Welcome. Nice to have you here. Nice to be here. Now I did a little bit of research on your project and I will tell you I was shocked and when we think at 59 there's not much left to shock me anymore. You're working on a gold copper porphyry in Jamaica. So you're not going for the sand, you're not going for the food, you're going for the metals that are there. I'll tell you a funny story. I've actually been in hotels 30 years, so we've done the sand and the food. And you're bored with that. Now you're doing this. Now we're doing this. So tell us about it. How big is it? Where is it? What is it? So we basically started about five years ago and did a full regional campaign across the whole of the island of Jamaica. We did 40,000 assays across the island, built a geochemical database and then we put down a number of licenses we have. I have to interrupt as I go. Are there labs in Jamaica? No. We have to ship it all to Canada. Wow. It's all certified. Okay. So from that we put down licenses as we went and we found good ground and we currently have about 4,000 square kilometers of license in Jamaica. That's huge. That's like half the island. No, it's less than half. Less than half. I'm not going for half. I think that our hosts here are going to be putting up a map showing how much land you actually have. And you showed me earlier that's a really big portion. It is, but the beauty is that we've got the best ground from the geochemical survey and as we've gone across the island we've made discoveries and one of those discoveries was something we didn't expect in Jamaica which is a rare earth deposit. And where's that? That is out in a parish called St. Elizabeth in the west end of the island and it's about a hundred square kilometer anomaly. And you found that by drilling, looking for copper gold? No. We actually didn't predetermine what we were looking for. We actually just canvassed the whole island, 62 elements as ICPMS and stuff showed itself. So one of the things that showed itself was the rare earths. I find this interesting. Most projects either are at surface or there's a reason to be there. This seems like we grab land, let's see what's there. What motivated you to do this? We were very, very careful. We did not put one license down until after we had done the geochemical work. All the licenses we put down were based on the geochemical work. Why did you do the geochemical work? We wanted to find out what was there. Why? What started this? I'll tell you what, when I was a kid, my grandmother took me on a little drive and we passed a landslide and there was a lot of pirate and I was convinced we were rich. It was all silver everywhere. And I got into hotels but when I actually decided to change tracks, one of the things I wanted to do is I looked and said, why isn't there any mineral work in Jamaica? We have box site from the 50s, but we've never really had a company do a full scale campaign. There's been little bits here and there. There's that Canadian gold company that started doing work six, seven, eight years ago. Yeah, yeah. I think it was crub at the time and they worked with us and did a lot of work and then the licenses got left and I think they're C3 now. But there has been some work, but there was never anything island-wide and comprehensive and it's a big island. It's a big island. Yeah. When you talk about a landslide in Canada, we joke that a prospector's two best friends were a forest fire and a landslide or a forestry company digging a road. Yeah, exactly because that's how new things get exposed. I'm finding this fascinating. What's the company called? It's called Geophysics Jamaica. It fools everybody because they think we're a service provider, but we're actually an exploration junior. You must have assays on the go all the time then. It's not like we're waiting for, there's assays coming in all the time. Every week I'm checking my email to see what's coming into the database, so it's a lot of fun. It is. So what's next? So we have six or seven projects in the island. We just started drilling on Friday three days ago at a copper gold porphyry in the east end of the island and that is we're grading in the stuff that we've collected so far from the area. We're getting 23% copper in the rocks and we're getting 32 grams of gold. Those are insane numbers. It's a 2x2 kilometer lithocap, so it looks very interesting, but the rare earth discovery is something we never expected and it just showed up in surface samples. We've done 44 drill holes over the area so far. On the rare earth? Yeah. So do you know which of the rare earths you have? We've got 42% heavies and we've got 58%. You did that math on the fly. That was good. And you got it right. Yeah, I think. We can round it off. Yeah. It's the rare earths, right? Nobody gets it right. It's a good distribution. We've done some test work. We're going to do a little bit more work on concentration and separation, but the test work we're getting 40% extraction. Well, here at the mining show with some of the world's experts on rare earths, great contacts to be made. Yeah. So you're in the right place at the right time. Yeah, I think so. Putting your team together or are you fully built? No, we're a small company. So we're building up as we go. As we make a discovery here and there, we know we need to do this or we need to work with this. And it's actually a lot of fun. It'll be good for the island. I think it'll be very good for Jamaica. It'll be great for tourism, be great for industry, all kinds of reasons. Is the government giving you any help? The government is very supportive. You know, I think that everybody knows that Bauxite has a limited future. We've been so big in Bauxite for many years. Right. Material left and time-wise, so it's good to have other industries that we can grow. It's fantastic. So it's a great story. Being in the industry, I hear a lot of stories, a lot of them go in one ear and out the other. This is one I'm going to follow. I'm very curious. I'm happy to hear that. Well, really, it's a really neat story. How it started and how it's going. So thank you for your time. Thank you very much. Geophysics Jamaica. Geophysics Jamaica. Yeah. Always good to make a new friend. Thank you for your time. Thank you. Have a great day.