There is an easy way to manage the risk on the Churchill play and it is oriented to primary colours and coincidental personal characteristics. Stornoway is involved in both that and the Melville play, which has good diments. Eira Thomas of Stornoway has very white skin, red hair and freckles. She was involved in a major mine before and so was Robert Friedland. They are both tall and slim. Robert Friedland also has blue eyes and red hair and very white skin and freckles and he started out looking for diamonds. He ended up finding a white metal. Kimberlites are green and blue and you would think that would clash with red, right? So copper, a red metal, would be the better metal for her to look for. Mary Webster also has red hair, very white freckled skin, is tall, and she was involved in the Windy Craggy, which is copper so that would be an obvious conclusion.. but diamonds are white, and they look very good on white freckled skin, so that overcomes the blue-green-red clash. We also have some male female opposition. Friedland started out looking for diamonds and ended up finding nickel, after being involved in a copper mine. Thomas started out looking for gold, and ended up looking for diamonds. It should become even more obvious that Mary Webster must have left some very good diamonds behind in Northern BC or thereabouts. We know she left a bunch behind in Ontario, but more on that later.
That should clear the matter up for you. It's really not high risk at all. Red and White with spots wins. Red hair, tall, slim, white skin, blue or green eyes.. = major mine in a complementary coloured metal.
EC<:-} |