HONEY HOLE MINES LTD.

Geophysical Survey - 2021 - Keithley Creek Project

Geophysical Survey - State-of-the-art

The Geophysical Survey was completed in 2021 with great success.

Live of Latest 2022 CARIBOO Lk - Angie and Honey Hole - Ass Rpt - Copy.docx

After 27 years of searching for the mother lode and providing evidence, Honey Hole Mines Ltd., is proud to say we have completed our mission as a private company. Due to Honey Hole Mines Ltd. being a private company, much of our research has been kept in secrecy. We are now offering an option or ownership of the mother lode on the Angie mineral properties.

Honey Hole Mines Ltd. suspected a mother lode in 1997, we then staked some Angie properties and commenced our search. In 2015 we hired a geologist with credentials like Teako Mines and Gibraltar Mines to perform a preliminary geologist's report.

During the research for this preliminary report, the geologist seemed to agree that perhaps the mother lode was on the Angie mineral properties, this gave Honey Hole Mines even more reason to push forward with our research. 

Honey Hole Mines performed a geophysical survey on the Angie mineral property, which confirmed two valuable deposits with location and depths of the deposits with Au troy tonnage. Area "A" with 4,000 troy tons at 150 m depth and Area "B" with 24,000 troy tons at 250 m depth. Area "A" Au gold values start at the bedrock surface and continue to other layers.  Area "B" Au gold values start at a lower deeper bedrock surface and continue to other layers. Today we are extremely grateful to the geologist (J. Mark Ralph) for his confidence in our mineral property.

The signing of our NDA is required for the permission to access some of the private company hidden files for this 2021 report.

In October 2021 Honey Hole Mines informed the Ministry of Mines about the Geophysical Survey findings on the Angie mineral claims and the two deposits of 4,000 and 24,000 troy tons of gold. We did not share the exact location of these deposits on the Angie claims.

The BC Government performed a seismic and a laser survey within a few weeks (Oct 2021) of being informed of our geophysical survey, however, to date 1 year later the Government has still not published its findings. The Government seismic and laser was performed along Keithley Creek which involved multiple claims and claim/tenure owners. The Government is not sharing this data with the claim/tenure owners, for some unknown reason, which would benefit the claim/tenure holder's properties.

The public pays for all government surveys and therefore has the right to the data received. Anyone having this data may contact Honey Hole Mines Ltd. We would appreciate the sharing of the data or file number as we have not been successful in locating that data. We have been assured that if we can acquire even a file number our collaborators will in fact bring this information to the public. Contact head office.

Honey Hole Mines Ltd. has not shared the complete results of the geophysical survey on the Angie mineral claims with the BC Government. When the BC Government publishes its findings then Honey Hole Mines will share its geophysical findings with the BC Government.

For the past 3 years, we have tested the geophysical survey equipment and we have to date located over 6 different deposits some being placer and some mineral. These 6 deposits have been located in areas other than the Honey Hole Mine site. 

Placer: when checking the area defined, we found gold on the surface and at deeper depths.

Mineral: When checking the area defined, we located gold-bearing quartz veins.

When locating the deposits the equipment gave us the location and the volume of the gold using a system of exciting the atoms of the gold, thus, making the gold glow, therefore, separating the volume of the gold from the bedrock/loose material.

The new-age geophysical equipment is capable of depths of over 1000 ft. (304.8 m) unlike the conventional survey equipment with depths of only 200 ft. There appear to be more deposits hidden at deeper levels than were detectable at earlier dates using the older survey equipment.