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A junior explorer does not get paid for acreage alone. It gets paid when the market believes a project can move from concept to catalyst without losing twelve months to permits, logistics, or weak targeting. That is where near-term drill targets, walk-up drill readiness, and exploration leverage start to matter in a very practical way.

For resource investors, these terms are not marketing shorthand. They are a framework for judging whether an exploration company can generate meaningful news flow, control risk, and convert geological potential into valuation re-rating. In early-stage precious metals exploration, timing and readiness often matter almost as much as the rocks.

Why near-term drill targets matter

A near-term drill target is not simply a spot on a map with a compelling story attached to it. It should be a target supported by enough technical work to justify drilling in the current or upcoming field season. That usually means the target has some combination of historical data, geochemical results, structural interpretation, surface sampling, geophysics, trenching, or known mineralized trends that narrow the drill thesis.

For investors, the distinction is straightforward. A company with targets that are theoretically prospective but operationally immature is still several steps away from a catalyst. A company with near-term drill targets has already done part of the derisking work. The target may still fail in the drill program – that is always possible in exploration – but the pathway to testing it is shorter, clearer, and easier to assess.

This is especially relevant in British Columbia and other mining-friendly jurisdictions where field seasons, permitting windows, and access conditions shape the pace of advancement. A target that can be drilled soon has more strategic value than one that requires another year of groundwork before the first hole is planned.

What walk-up drill readiness actually means

Walk-up drill readiness is one of the most abused phrases in the junior mining market, largely because it sounds decisive. In practice, it should mean a project is positioned so a company can mobilize a rig with limited delay once capital, permits, and seasonal conditions align.

That readiness has several layers. The first is geological. There needs to be a target model worth testing, not just a generalized claim that the property sits in the right belt or near a known deposit. The second is operational. Access, drill pads, contractor availability, camp logistics, and terrain all affect whether drilling can begin on a realistic schedule. The third is regulatory. In Canada, a project may be geologically attractive and physically accessible, but if permit amendments, consultation, or additional baseline work are still pending, it is not truly walk-up ready.

For serious investors, the phrase should trigger questions rather than automatic enthusiasm. Is the company referring to existing permits or to a belief that permits can be obtained quickly? Are proposed collar locations already selected? Has the target area been surveyed and accessed before? Is the company funded for a program that is material enough to test the thesis? Readiness is only credible when those answers are specific.

Near-term drill targets and walk-up drill readiness in project ranking

Not every asset in a portfolio should be treated equally. Exploration companies often hold a mix of district-scale concepts, historical showings, and more advanced drill-stage opportunities. The projects that tend to command the strongest market attention are those where near-term drill targets and walk-up drill readiness overlap.

That overlap matters because it compresses the path from interpretation to data. If a company can define a target and test it in the same operating window, it gains efficiency in both technical execution and capital markets communication. News flow becomes more coherent. Investors can follow a sequence from mapping to sampling to drill planning to assay results without long dead periods in between.

This does not mean earlier-stage assets have less value. Some large discoveries begin as conceptual land positions with limited work. But in a market that often discounts long timelines, companies with drill-ready targets usually receive more immediate attention because they offer a clearer catalyst horizon.

How exploration leverage is created

Exploration leverage is the ratio between capital deployed and value potentially created if a target works. In the junior mining space, leverage is strongest when a relatively modest exploration program can materially change the market’s view of a project or company.

That leverage comes from several sources. A property may have historical high-grade results that were never followed up with modern targeting. It may sit in a proven mineral belt where analogues suggest scale beyond known showings. It may contain multiple parallel structures so one successful hole expands the opportunity set rather than proving a single isolated zone. It may also benefit from underexplored historical datasets that can be reinterpreted with current geological models.

The market generally rewards exploration leverage when there is a believable mechanism for rerating. A two-hole program on a weakly defined target may generate interest, but it rarely changes the story. A disciplined initial campaign on a structurally coherent, geochemically supported target with room for scale can have a very different impact, even at modest metre counts.

The trade-off between speed and quality

There is a temptation in the small-cap exploration market to equate speed with competence. That is not always the right read. Moving quickly is valuable only if the target quality supports the pace.

A rushed drill program can destroy value as easily as it creates it. Poor collar positioning, incomplete structural interpretation, or inadequate surface work can lead to inconclusive results that are later blamed on bad luck. In many cases, the problem is not that the project lacks merit. The problem is that management drilled too early or with an undersized data package.

The better model is disciplined urgency. Advance projects efficiently, but do not skip the work that improves hit probability. Investors should pay close attention to whether a company explains why a target is ready now, as opposed to merely saying that it is.

What investors should look for in a drill-ready story

When assessing near-term drill targets and walk-up drill readiness exploration leverage, investors should focus on evidence that connects geology to execution. Historical assays alone are not enough. Surface samples without structural context are not enough either. The strongest setups usually show multiple layers of support.

That support might include mapped alteration corridors, coincident soil or rock geochemistry, geophysical signatures, historical workings, and clear structural controls on mineralization. It should also include practical evidence of advancement, such as existing access, a defined work program, and a credible financing plan.

This is where stronger management teams separate themselves. They understand that the market is not just backing a rock package. It is backing the team’s ability to allocate capital toward the highest-conviction targets and move those targets through a logical sequence of derisking steps.

For companies operating in established Canadian jurisdictions, that execution advantage can be meaningful. Stable mining frameworks reduce one category of uncertainty, but they do not eliminate the need for disciplined project selection. A large land package in the right region is useful. A large land package with a clear, drillable target is far more compelling.

Why this matters in precious metals exploration now

Gold and silver investors are increasingly selective. Strong metal prices can improve sentiment, but they do not automatically lift every junior equally. Capital tends to concentrate in stories with visible catalysts, technical credibility, and jurisdictional strength.

That puts a premium on projects that are more than prospective. They need to be actionable. A company that can point to near-term drill targets, demonstrate genuine walk-up drill readiness, and explain its exploration leverage in concrete geological terms is better positioned to stand out. Golden Age Exploration operates in exactly the kind of environment where that discipline matters, particularly when historical data, district context, and staged advancement can be combined into a clear drill thesis.

There is still no substitute for the bit. Drill results decide whether a target advances, expands, or falls away. But before those results arrive, investors can do a great deal of useful work by evaluating readiness, not just potential. In this market, the projects that tend to command attention are the ones where the next hole is not a distant possibility but a credible near-term event with room to matter.

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Dave McAdam

Dave McAdam
Chief Financial Officer

GOLDEN AGE EXPLORATION

Mr. David McAdam brings more than 35 years of handson finance and operations experience, having served in senior executive roles including Chief Financial Officer, Vice President of Finance, and Vice President of Operations across public and private companies in North America and South Africa.

Mr. McAdam has held CFO positions with several public and privately held organizations, including multiple mining companies. His experience includes serving as CFO of a Vancouverbased TSXlisted mining company with producing assets in South Africa and public reporting obligations across the TSX, AIM, and JSE exchanges. His background also spans sectors such as EnglishasaSecondLanguage education, where he provided executive advisory and investor relations support, and a Fortune 150 waste management and recycling company, where he served as Vice President of Operations and Director of Finance. In these roles, he regularly reported to public company Audit, Safety, and Risk Committees and delivered full Board presentations within a Fortune 150 environment.

Most recently, Mr. McAdam has focused on providing executive advisory and consulting services to small and mediumsized startup enterprises. He currently serves as CFO advisor to Bathurst Metals Corp. (TSX.V) as well as several private mining companies in Canada.

Mr. McAdam holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of British Columbia and a Securities Institute of Canada Certificate.

Aziz UR

Aziz-Ur Rehman,
Chief Financial Officer

GOLDEN AGE EXPLORATION

Aziz-ur Rehman, CPA, CGA, ACCA(UK), BGS
Chief Financial Officer

GOLDEN AGE EXPLORATION

Mr. Rehman is a Chartered Professional Accountant, Certified General Accountant(CPA, CGA) and Chartered Certified Accountant(ACCA) from the United Kingdom. He attended Langara College and then graduated from Athabasca University with a Bachelor of General Studies(BGS). Mr. Rehman has a broad range of financial accounting and management accounting experience and served various private and publicly listed junior mining companies during the last 12 years.

Ehsan image

Ehsan Salmabadi,
Qualified Person (“QP”) / Director

GOLDEN AGE EXPLORATION

Ehsan Salmabadi, B.Sc.(Geology), P. Geo. and Qualified Person (“QP”)

Mr. Salmabadi has worked in the mining industry since 2007 and has a broad base of previous experience in not only exploration but also mine development and operation. Mr. Salmabadi began his career working for exploration companies and decided to move to a mine setting to expand his breadth of knowledge. He served as an Underground Mine Geologist, then Senior Geologist at North American Tungsten Corp. at the Cantung Mine in the Northwest Territories where he was involved in increasing mineral resources, reserve development, and long-range planning. Since then, Mr. Salmabadi has taken his mining and exploration experience and applied it as a consultant to exploration projects in Canada and the United States. Mr. Salmabadi holds a Bachelor of Science in geology from the University of British Columbia and is registered as a Professional Geologist (P.Geo.) with the Engineers and Geoscientists of BC. He served as the Vice President of Exploration for Stuhini Exploration Ltd as Senior Geologist at Stuhini from 2019 until 2025 and currently is a senior project Geologist with Fireweed Metals Corp.

Andrew in snow

Andrew Wilkins, Project Geologist

GOLDEN AGE EXPLORATION
I have balanced work in two professions for over 30 years. During the winter months, I have worked as a ski guide in the helicopter skiing industry since 1986. This included being a business partner with Whistler Heli-Skiing from 1994 to 2006 before selling the company to Whistler/Blackcomb. For the remainder of the year, I have worked in the mining exploration industry as an exploration geologist since 1981. Over the years, I have specialized in working in rugged mountainous environments. More recently, I have managed medium sized exploration projects in Canada, USA, Mexico and Argentina. I am currently QP for Mountain Boy Minerals and Stuhini Exploration.
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Tibor Gajdics,
President / Director

GOLDEN AGE EXPLORATION
Licensed to manage investments for individual clients in 1982 at Yorkton Securities, Tibor retired in 1998 and has since established himself as a specialist in corporate governance, project finance, mergers and acquisitions. With over 35 years in the business of raising equity for start ups and mid-tier companies, Tibor specializes in structuring early stage companies and identifying the financial instruments best suited for each venture. He also has extensive experience internationally in mining, focused on gold exploration, development and production. Most recently, as founding member and President of biotech company, KOP Therapeutics Corp, Tibor has raised more than $3M in equity capital for KOP and developed a pathway to commercialization of a new cancer drug platform with a target date for FDA approved human trials in 2024 – 2025. KOP Therapeutics’ mission is to support biomedical scientific research by working closely with lead investigators / scientists to discover leading edge scientific breakthroughs to improve human health.
Kevin Hanson

Kevin Hanson, Director

GOLDEN AGE EXPLORATION
Kevin Hanson, B.A.(Commerce), C.P.A, C.A., C.P.A. (Nevada)

Mr. Hanson is a Chartered Accountant, Certified Public Accountant since 1983 and C.P.A. (Nevada) with more than 43 years experience in the financial reporting and 29 years in auditing of publicly traded companies. From January 1991 to December 2007, Mr. Hanson was a partner with Amisano Hanson, a public accounting firm which merged with BDO Dunwoody LLP (predecessor to BDO Canada LLP) in December 2007 and continued as a consultant with BDO Canada LLP, Chartered Accountants until 2011. From 1987 to 1991, Mr. Hanson provided services as a controller of seven reporting public companies. From 1994 until 1998, Mr. Hanson served as a member of the Technical Subcommittee to the British Columbia Securities Commission and the Vancouver Stock Exchange. From 1993 to current, Mr. Hanson has been directly involved with public companies, in both Canadian and US markets, including incorporation, IPO’s, management, financing and project acquisition services. Mr. Hanson was a director of two junior capital pool companies, Pender Capital Corp, from 1993 to 1995, and Commercial Consolidators Corp. (formerly Balmoral Capital Corp.) from May 1998 to October 1999. Mr. Hanson was the President and a director of Petro River Oil Corp., (formerly Brockton Capital Corp.) from February 2000 to December 2007 and a director of Coastal Gold Corp (formerly Ridgemont Capital Corp.) from July, 2008 to November, 2010. Mr. Hanson was also a director and Chief Financial Officer of Taal Distributed Information Technologies Inc. (formerly Squire Mining Ltd.) from August 2014 until March 2018. Mr. Hanson has been a director of Golden Age Exploration Ltd from February 2021 to current and President / CFO from January 11, 2022 to current.
Kevin

Kevin Hanson, President

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Mr. Hanson is a Chartered Accountant, Certified Public Accountant since 1983 and C.P.A. (Nevada) with more than 35 years experience in the financial reporting and 25 years in auditing of publicly traded companies. From January 1991 to December 2007, Mr. Hanson was a partner with Amisano Hanson, a public accounting firm which merged with BDO Dunwoody LLP (predecessor to BDO Canada LLP) in December 2007 and continued as a consultant with BDO Canada LLP, Chartered Accountants until 2011. From 1987 to 1991, Mr. Hanson provided services as a controller of seven reporting public companies. From 1994 until 1998, Mr. Hanson served as a member of the Technical Subcommittee to the British Columbia Securities Commission and the Vancouver Stock Exchange. From 1993 to current, Mr. Hanson has been directly involved with public companies, in both Canadian and US markets, including incorporation, IPO’s, management, financing and project acquisition services. Mr. Hanson was a director of two junior capital pool companies, Pender Capital Corp, from 1993 to 1995, and Commercial Consolidators Corp. (formerly Balmoral Capital Corp.) from May 1998 to October 1999. Mr. Hanson was the President and a director of Petro River Oil Corp., (formerly Brockton Capital Corp.) from February 2000 to December 2007 and a director of Coastal Gold Corp (formerly Ridgemont Capital Corp.) from July, 2008 to November, 2010. Mr. Hanson was also a director and Chief Financial Officer of Taal Distributed Information Technologies Inc. (formerly Squire Mining Ltd.) from August 2014 until March 2018. Mr. Hanson is also a director and Chief Financial Officer of Zena Mining Corp. (formerly Zena Capital Corp.), since February 2000, a public industrial minerals company involved in the exploration of barite in British Columbia.