Post by
Magnum2 on Nov 03, 2021 11:05pm
Ticketyboo, just biding my time waiting for Mikeys' call...
Permagrin, Yes every day is just another day closer to a "call from Mikey".
Yes, I have offered up cash to finance here, but the price gets steeper and steeper + now Mikey has painted himself into a dark deep hole if assays are more of the same as 2012/2013...
Intrigued by the project’s potential, the New Brunswick-based junior kicked off a 64-hole diamond drill program in November 2012. It funded the program with the nearly $600,000 that it had raised in private placements during November and December 2012. By the end of that year, it had punched 47 shallow holes to test the Maisie vein system to a depth of 30 metres. Liking the initial gold assays, the company chose to focus its efforts and resources on the Menneval property and dropped its option agreement on Lavoie’s NW gold project. Taylor and Lavoie both won the Prospector of the Year Award in 2012 at the Exploration, Mining & Petroleum New Brunswick conference. Taylor was recognized for the Maisie discovery, 15 km northeast of Kedgwick, and Lavoie for the NW gold project, 10 km east of Saint-Quentin. Both projects are 30 km apart, suggesting a potential new gold district in the relatively underexplored area. In early 2013, Slam drilled another 17 holes on the Maisie zone. It reported 15 of those holes hit quartz veins varying in thickness from 0.1 to 4.8 metres. Some notable hits from the second drilling phase included 22.97 grams gold over 1.9 metres and 121 grams gold over a third of a metre. The drilling extended the Maisie gold vein along a 700-metre strike length and over a vertical depth of 30 metres. The explorer also drilled 8 holes into Zone 9. Taylor says the holes hit gold-bearing veins to an 80-metre depth, but that Maisie had higher grades. In March Slam sent a 27 kg sample from the Maisie zone to a lab in Fredericton, N.B., to test its metallurgy. Results indicated the gold in the vein occurred as “free particles” that could be separated with conventional gravity methods. Taylor says the Maisie vein is reminiscent of the veins found in the California motherlode district, in that they pinch and swell, and create ore shoots with high grades. And the veins seem to run deep, potentially supporting a long mining life. In July 2013, the explorer closed a $145,000 private placement to keep working on Maisie. It launched a second trenching program in September to define the scope and grade of the Maisie vein at surface. The company found visible gold in 13 of the 29 samples taken from the vein. The junior hopes to conduct a 2,000-tonne bulk sample in mid-2014, before calculating an open-pit resource. The bulk sample will be sent for laboratory and mill testing, and provide more details about the size, grade and structure of the deposit. “It will also tell us about the [mining] process and how much value we can derive from Maisie,” Taylor says. To help reach those goals, Slam announced a $500,000 private placement in late November. Taylor says the financing should close shortly, and says that if all the chips fall into place, Maisie could be in production as early as 2015. He notes that the property is roadside, and predicts it will be relatively cheap and simple to extract the gold. “The Maisie zone is exciting, but not just because of the location. We haven’t drilled it deep yet, but there’s a huge potential at depth, and by expanding outwards. We are optimistic about it. It’s in our backyard, so that adds another level of excitement.” He says the Menneval project is in an area that was not considered — at least by Slam’s geologists — to have gold potential, mainly because New Brunswick was thought to be more of a base-metal area. “But we’ve already changed our thinking on that, and we expect to change other people’s,” Taylor says. Elsewhere in New Brunswick, Slam owns the Nepisiguit and Nash Creek silver–base-metal deposits, which it is aiming to partner off. In Ontario, it holds the Reserve Creek gold project. The junior recently closed at 5¢ per share and has a $1.3-million market capitalization, as well as 26 million shares outstanding.
Permagrin, Yes so they have tried shallow, as deep as 80 Meters(72 holes drilled so far + the pending 21 new drill holes to come)...talk of production/resource # in 2014/2015, what happened???
Yes regardless of whom finances the next drill hole(s) here, if the pending 21 assays can't hit this outta the park "by alot" the next anti up will be very steep....flow-thru works for me as does 5ct shares with warrants attached;)))
Tick Tock Mikey