RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:BGM is holding BGM down, not the marketHammer, what an inelegant reply. I ask 3 questions to smoke you out in an effort to further understand why you as so negative in your postings as articulated by rollercoaster.
One of them was dialed into geology. You ducked it.
One of them was end product knowledge. You avoided it.
Third one was process at the mine. You botched that, as well.
What we got is a "this is what I claim myself to be: a geologist.
Then you threw down a gauntlet challenge back to me to answer the very 3 simple questions I put to you. To what end? You wouldn't know if I was blowing smoke up your ssap or actually speaking truth. That's pretty screwed, hammer. People with actual knowledge, especially in the field could have dispatched those pretty d*quick and we'd be on down the road to a useful conversation.
You took being asked anything as personal even in your own self-proclaimed field, and I was after factual, knowledge based response from you a guy who seems to have a lot to say about BGM based upon some metric only known to him, but generally of a negative perspective.
Reminds me of the old saying:
to someone who is a hammer, everything in the world looks like a nail. Problem is, BGM isn't a real estate house framing concern, and you are a p/p geologist from the looks of things.
The final piece of BS i'm calling you on? This statement: "And having worked at gold mines I know that there are often
stuggles in the mill with shifts in grade in terms of recoveries."
What you call "stuggles in the mill" are just everyday grist for the hand and glove work between the met lab, the engineering super and the guys in the pit. Finding gold in a rock host be it porphyry or a quartz vein, is a micro-process. You can't take what you learned in some school however long ago you attended and went on field trips with the cute redhead in your class, and be qualified to comment on processing circuit residence times, particle diminution or percent recoveries to waste rock, etc.
And you worked AT GOLD MINES. If you were really a geo with some chops, valuable experiential chops even better, you'd have said you've worked WITH gold mining mgmt to improve grade and recovery percentages.
For those reasons you have been chopped. And you didn't even make it to the desert round: which one produces yellow gold and which one green gold. Now I'm asking the 3 questions again.
You want a mulligan?