Province shuts down tours of old Yankee Boy mine
2025-05-06 19:04 ET - Street Wire
Also Street Wire (C-XIM) Ximen Mining Corp (3)
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by Mike Caswell
The Attorney General of British Columbia has won a court order against Frank Schlichting, a B.C. man who was offering tours of an abandoned gold mine on his property. The government said that the mine was unsafe, with videos showing unsupported roof conditions and deep shafts. Government inspectors previously expressed concerns to Mr. Schlichting, but he ignored their efforts and said that he would continue to offer tours.
The closure of Mr. Schlichting's tour operation is contained in an order handed down in the Supreme Court of British Columbia on May 2, 2025. A judge has ordered that no one enter the mine unless approved by a government inspector and has directed Mr. Schlichting to immediately stop offering tours. The judge has also ordered that a physical barrier be put in place that would prevent any access to the mine.
The order also names Ximen Mining Corp., which owns the mineral tenure surrounding the mine. The company does not appear to have opposed the matter, or at least has not filed any court documents indicating that it has a position. While the company has mineral tenure to the area, it has never operated the mine.
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Well, which is it?
If you open it, they will come...or there's a sucker born every minute.
Posted by halcrow at 2025-05-07 11:03
Let the guy show the mine. That’s what waivers are for
Restrict the kids to safer areas , put in some emergency procedures and
Call it a day. This is a geological quest and creates future explorers and gets
The kids of the video games and into the real world
Posted by Dman at 2025-05-07 13:44
"This is a geological quest and creates future explorers and gets The kids of the video games and into the real world"
Well, in the real world in Grand Forks, the Boundary Hospital is a Level 1 community hospital in the Kootenay Boundary health service area. Located in Grand Forks, the hospital offers services including inpatient and emergency.
"Off the video games into the real world"...of underground mining...circa 1900
"In 1900, underground mining in British Columbia was a dangerous and physically demanding job. Miners faced risks like collapses, explosions from dust and gas, and the use of hazardous tools and lighting. Many mines used the "room-and-pillar" method, removing ore and leaving pillars to support the roof, which also created risks of collapses."
Posted by halcrow at 2025-05-07 19:25
EUREKA, Utah – Underneath the mountains and deserts of the U.S. West lie hundreds of thousands of abandoned mines, an underground world that can hold serious danger and unexpected wonder.
They are a legacy of the region’s prospecting past, when almost anyone could dig a mine and then walk away, with little cleanup required, when it stopped producing.
In Utah alone, the state is trying to seal more than 10,000 open mines with cinderblocks and metal grates after people have died in rock falls and all-terrain-vehicle crashes and from poisonous air over the past three decades. Just this month in Arizona, a prospector broke his left leg and ankle after plunging to the bottom of an old mine shaft. He spent nearly three days there with no food or water fending off rattlesnakes before a friend heard his cries for help.
Still, not everyone wants to see the mines closed. For years, a dedicated subculture of explorers has been slipping underground to see tunnels lined with sparkling quartz, century-old rail cars and caverns that open in the earth like buried ballrooms.
Jeremy MacLee also lends his expertise to searches for missing people. That’s how he got to know Bill Powell, who looked for his 18-year-old son, Riley, for months before the teenager and his girlfriend were found dead in a mine shaft the outside the small town of Eureka.
https://vancouver.citynews.ca/2018/10/29/us-wests-abandoned-mines-hold-danger-and-for-some-thrills/
Posted by halcrow at 2025-05-07 19:32