 We're here today with Craig Lindsey from Otis Gold Corp. Otis is an Idaho-based gold producer who has had a fascinating year in the news. Craig, how are we doing today? Peter, I'm doing fantastic. I appreciate you having me on today. Where are you today? I'm sitting here in my office in Rainy Vancouver. Well, it's sunshiney here in Toronto, and it looks like the sun has been shining on you down in Idaho. Can you give us an overview of the project? Sure. Well, our flagship project is the Kilgore Gold Project. It is located in southeastern Idaho. It's got a 520,000-ounce indicated resource and a 300,000-ounce inferred resource. The indicated resource of 520,000 ounces is at a grade of about 0.6 grams per ton. This is a project that we've been developing since 2008. We own 100% interest in this project. It's got a significant upside in the past year. We've had some really stellar drill results, draw-dropping results, frankly, of between 50 and 100 meters, grading between 2 and 4 grams per ton. So it's given significant life to the project and demonstrated some real potential to grow the size and the grade of the project. The other thing that we've got at Kilgore, there's no royalties on the project, which is a burden for a lot of our competitors. The other thing we have is a low-projected strip ratio of about 1.5 to 1. And probably the final thing that really differentiates us from some of the competitors out there is we have some world-class metallurgy. We get between 80 and 85% gold recoveries at inch-and-a-half crush. And the Kilgore Gold Project, ultimately, would be mined as an open-pit, heat-bleach gold deposit. So those kind of recoveries at that kind of crush size really can potentially have a strong impact on the economics of this sort of deposit. Well, sounds like the sun has been shining on you. There's lots of interesting things to follow up with from that answer. Now, the last time you and I sat down was at the mining show. Your drill results had just come out. And we were worried about the feel of the market. At PDAC, it was quiet optimism. What was your take on the market at the time and how do you think it's changed taking you where you are today? Well, I think between right around from January up to PDAC, there was really a lot of optimism in the gold space. A lot of the seniors were starting to take a good run. The market was starting to look at the juniors. Many juniors had moved nicely up to and around PDAC. Since that time, gold's taken a bit of a breather. It hasn't pushed through that $1,300 per ounce level. We've had a pullback down close to 1,200. Again, we're kind of range-bound between 1,200 and 1,300. And that's created a bit of a pause in the gold space. And valuations have come off a little bit since then That said, medium to long-term, the space continues to look very compelling from an investor perspective. Most people that you would talk to, and you talk to kind of I expect a lot more people than I do. But most people would suggest that in the medium term here we're going to see a strengthening in the price of gold and that's certainly going to help companies like ours. Institutional investors based on my discussion since PDAC are starting to come back into the market. They're starting to look more closely at the lower end of the market that being the exploration and development space that we're sitting in. Your background is as a finance person. You've come up through the ranks, paid your dues. You have your battle scars to show. How is your geology team to support you in your finance efforts? Peter, I'm glad you asked that question. I'm really blessed with a very strong, very well-qualified technical team. It's led by two fellows, Dr. John Cardin, PhD geologist, fellow by the name of Mitch Bernardi. Both have over 30 years of gold exploration and development experience in the Western U.S. They both have deposits to their credit. John Cardin, for example, was the discoverer of something called the Lamefoot deposit, which became Echo Bay's highest grade, lowest cost gold project. Really capable guys have a very intimate understanding and knowledge of the Kilgore project because back in the mid-90s, they worked with a company called Echo Bay and during that period Echo Bay owned the Kilgore project. It was actually John and Mitch that ran the development team for Echo Bay out of Kilgore during that time. Does that explain then why the company wound up in Idaho? It's one of the primary reasons, yes. Looking forward to chatting with you again, Craig. Peter, thanks a lot for spending the time with me to initiate it. Otis Gold Corp, O-O-O-T-S-X-V. Thanks, Craig.