RE: Results - from V:CYU Very Good BUT......the cost of infrastructure is always the straw that breaks the camel's back in a mining situation. These costs are typically massive and that is why numerous known deposits the world over are sitting around waiting for higher commodity prices so that the economics work. Being 350 kms from a major electrical grid point at Stewart, B.C...well, mining op. costs can get expensive with diesel. And these days, there are the time-consuming hoops and processes you have to go through with the environmental guys, etc. etc.
So having a permitted and operating moly mine and roaster jsut down the road puts Leeward way ahead of the game from a timing, infrastructure and operating cost perspective. Leeward is sitting only about 18 kms(11 miles) down the road from the existing operating Endako moly mine with roaster. As I understand it, the trucks can go down the hill to Endako fully loaded with ore and come back up the hill to Nithi Mountain empty to reload. I would say that makes for a fuel efficient scenario.
CN Rail and B.C. Hydro is also right there (and NOT 350 kms away) as is the Yellowhead highway and various existing access and logging roads. So,the grades that LWC are getting are pretty much what they expected - and will work in the economics provided the volume is there and it certainly appears that it is there. It will be a moderate grade, high volume deposit by the time they are done with their drilling on the Gamma Zone Area.
The market seems to have yawned at the results from the Gamma West Zone which Leeward is just beginning to tickle as shown by their published results which I clipped below (I hope the columns work out):
-------------------------------------------
GAMMA WEST
Hole ID From m To m Interval m MoS2 Mo
G-07-54 14.33 20.42 6.10 0.053 0.031
G-07-55 57.00 81.38 24.4 0.069 0.041
G-07-55 60.05 66.14 6.10 0.167 0.100
-------------------------------------------
The 0.167% over 6.1 meters isn't exactly too shabby (It is right up there with the 0.153% reported in the News from CYU - See Below) LWC may soon show that there may be a LOT MORE where that came from in the Gamma West Area which may turn out to be RICHER and LARGER than the Gamma Zone. The Drill Bit will have to tell that story.
So, Leeward is in a good position here. While grades are more glamourous and tend to excite the market, grades alone don't always tell the whole story and don't always guarantee that an operating mine will result.
I captured the the article from the Northern Miner (See below +++) from the V:CYU BB (Acknowledgement to Claudius151 for posting it there)and posted it here for convenient and interesting reading so you don't have to go looking for it.
I also see that on Nov. 16/07 V:CYU released more news on their drilling at Cassiar - 482 feet averaging 0.153% MoS2 at their Storie Property. Those are VERY NICE grades and intercepts and I wish them every success.
All the above (and below) is for your information,
All the Be$t,
LB
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The Northern Miner, Volume 93 Number 36, Oct 29 - Nov 4, 2007
Is a Cassiar Revival in Sight?
Exploration breathes new life into abandoned BC mining town
By Gwen Preston
SITE VISIT
Cassiar, B.C. -- For more than 10 years, Cassiar was a ghost town. The northern B.C. town had thrived on an asbestos mine for 40 years but in 1992, the mine suddenly shut down due to diminishing demand and the expenses of converting an open-pit operation to an underground mine. Most of the town, including houses, were sold off and trucked away, or bulldozed and burnt to the ground. Only a Catholic church, a hockey arena, and four old apartment blocks still stand, accompanied by one of the largest tailings piles in the world.
But the ghost town is experiencing a revival, with two exploration companies -- Cusac Gold Mines (CQC-T, CUSIF-O) and Columbia Yukon Explorations (CYU-V, CYUXF-O) -- working within a few kilometres. Cusac has been in the area for years, searching out gold; Columbia Yukon joined the Cassiar scene only a few years ago to explore for molybdenum. Disparate though they may be, they're working together where possible. In fact, both companies are housing their staff in the abandoned apartment blocks.
The township is still diesel- powered; the nearest point of a B.C. electrical grid is the town of Stewart, some 350 km south. Access is straightforward, as the town sits just a few kilometres off highway 37, and there is telephone service and a revitalized airstrip now busy with activity.
Moly Storie
A few kilometres southwest of Cassiar, near the top of the hill that rises gently out of Troutline Creek then plunges down into Lang Creek, sits the Storie molybdenum deposit. Columbia Yukon Explorations optioned the property from private Calgary-based Eveready Resource in March 2006, signing a 5-year payment agreement worth $1.15 million and 600,000 shares as well as $4 million in exploration spending.
Eighteen months later, Columbia Yukon is so confident in the deposit that it has already completed its option payments and has drilled 24,000 metres since mid-July.
"We're not goofing around on this thing -- we want to finish all the drilling that's needed on the property in the next 24 months," says president Ronald Coombes. "We've got four drills turning day and night and it's going extremely well. I'm just tickled."
After a 20-hole, 5,000-metre drill program in 2006 designed to twin many of the holes drilled by Shell Canada Resources in 1979 and New Jersey Zinc in 1970, Columbia Yukon had the resource estimate recalculated to comply with National Instrument 43-101 standards. The report found that Storie hosts an inferred resource of 101.6 million tonnes grading 0.67% molybdenum, based on a 0.035% molybdenum cutoff, an open-pit depth maximum of 325 metres, and an assumed 1.5:1 stripping ratio.
The deposit as currently outlined is a slightly elongated circle, measuring 700 by 600 metres, but it is still open to the east, west, and north, as well as at depth. It occurs within the Cassiar Stock, which is composed mostly of quartz monzonites, and mineralization is associated with quartz-feldspar porphyry.
The zone is cut by northerly and easterly trending faults, most notably the west-southwest-trending Crone fault. The deposit consists of one or more vertically separate and interconnecting tabular to lens-shaped bodies, generally parallel to the Crone fault. There is no large-scale quartz stockwork of vein system; rather, molybdenite occurs as selvages on or within quartz veinlets and as coatings on fracture surfaces, grains or smears on slickensided fractures, rosettes and disseminations.
Columbia Yukon's 2006 drill program met with success, returning numerous intercepts of over 100 metres grading between 0.05% and 0.12% molybdenum. Several intercepts included higher-grade segments, including: 128 metres of 0.063% moly from 27 metres depth in hole 13, with the top 87 metres grading 0.07%; 69 metres grading 0.104% moly from 117 metres in hole 5; and 186 metres of 0.098% moly in hole 8.
Based on those results, the company closed a series of financings and then announced an ambitious 30,000- to 40,000-metre, $6-million drill program for the second half of 2007. As of mid-October, drillers had completed 24,000 metres and planned to keep drills turning at least a few more weeks, to complete up to 10 more holes.
Much of the program is aimed at infill drilling so as to upgrade the inferred resource to indicated, though a number of holes are being drilled to the east of the current resource to expand the deposit.
The company has received assay results for the first 16 holes from the 2007 program, all of which were drilled east or south of the resource boundary. The results extended the mineralization 100 metres east along the Crone fault.
Most of the assay results were similar to those from the previous year. Hole 27 returned 80 metres grading 0.082% molybdenum from 110 metres depth, and hole 29 intersected 57 metres grading 0.1% moly from 66 metres.
Several holes returned shorter, higher-grade assays: hole 31 cut 54 metres of 0.18% moly from 36 metres depth, and hole 33 hit 9 metres of 0.238% moly from 51 metres.
As an interesting note to those grades, Columbia Yukon was worried about molybdenite loss in the core-splitting process and twinned one of its 2006 holes (no. 20). The entire core from the new hole (no. 41) was sent to the assay lab, unsplit. Hole 20 had returned 87 metres of 0.093% moly; the whole-core assay for hole 41 returned 78 metres grading 0.125%, a 30% difference. Coombes says the company is currently twinning two more holes to determine if a 30% loss is the norm.
The company also recently completed an induced-polarization (IP) survey of Storie that pointed to the deposit's expansion potential.
"The IP shows the X fault as being much more significant than the Crone fault," Coombes says. "It displays as a strong linear feature with multiple parallel breaks, and potentially larger than Crone as far as setting goes. You never know until you drill it, but it's exciting."
In mid-October, Columbia Yukon was trading around $1.35. The company has a 52-week trading range of 39¢-$2.88 and 33.1 million shares issued, 50.6 million shares fully diluted. Coombes says the company currently has roughly $15 million in the bank from recent financings and a fairly steady cash stream from the exercise of warrants.