Ashley Gold Corp. (ASHL.C) is the quintessential junior mining explorer, being a small early stage operation run on the smell of an oily rag.
Where Ashley differs from many other junior explorers is what they get done in that scenario, with a geology-focused CEO who barely pays himself, flies coach, lifts rocks, and pitches tents, when he’s not in his one-room zoom office, pounding the phones and poring over data to see if there’s anything out there his competitors have missed.
CEO Darcy Christian wants nothing more than to do the work, a rare bird in an industry filled with market miners who consider drilling to be risky side efforts between financings.
Christian isn’t your average markets guy, so the financings are small.
And he has some investors behind him who believe in him, so he’s not desperate to pump out faux news in the hunt for short term half cent spikes.
Here’s what he IS good at: This week Ashley Gold received exploration permiting for the Howie property, and vital funding from the Ontario Junior Exploration Program (OJEP) – basically, the government didn’t just say, “Sure Darcy, get drilling,” it also paid for $121,000 of work.
This exploration permit encompasses an induced polarization survey, stripping and channel sampling at Katisha, along with 13 drill locations, set to bolster the company’s 2024 gold exploration endeavors in the Dryden area, while the two grants from OJEP cover the Howie and Tabor drone magnetic survey and the 2023 Tabor Lake drill program.
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