MNLU .........I bought this stock today.

See press release:

Mainland Resources Places First Haynesville Shale Well on Production at 23.3 Million Cubic Feet Natural Gas Per Day Rate
Published: February 3, 2009
HOUSTON, Feb. 3 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Mainland Resources, Inc., a Nevada corporation (the "Company") (OTC Bulletin Board MNLU; 5MN-Frankfurt) reports that the Company and its operator have placed the Griffith 11 #1 well in DeSoto Parish, Louisiana on production. The Griffith 11 #1(Section 11, 13N, 14W) had an initial production rate of 23.3 Mmcfe/d on a 28/64" choke with 7,550# flowing casing pressure.


The Griffith 11 #1 is the first well to be drilled with the Company's operator in the Haynesville shale on its leases. Mainland owns a 40% Working Interest in this well and all subsequent Haynesville wells to be drilled on its leases.


Mainland Resources is also formalizing plans to drill and complete in the Hosston/Cotton Valley formations on its Louisiana property. The Company received a Reserve Report in December 2008 that shows Proved Undeveloped Reserves of 2.143 Bcf in these formations from a single future twin to the current well. This estimate is based on 40-acre well spacing.


Mainland holds a 100% Working Interest in all rights above the base of the Cotton Valley formation, including the Hosston, in 2,695 net acres.


Company President, Mike Newport states, "We have validated our model to drill to the Haynesville shale on our DeSoto Parish leases and have our first producing Haynesville gas well on line. Our commitment now is to use this success across the entire project so that Mainland gets the maximum value from its unique position in this major gas play."

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Petrohawk seem to keep posting those BIG numbers.

It makes you wonder what they are doing that is so much different than the others.

Will those longer laterals pay off in the long run?

And what if they decide to produce with those long laterals and drill 8 wells per section.
Completion design has improved as more wells have been drilled. Exco has done pretty well too. See Oden Heirs well in Section 30 (14-13)

Current thinking is that it will take up to eight laterals to completely develop a governmental section.
How long would it take to full develop 8 Wells per section?
1 year, 5 years, 10 years, longer?
I'm buying proven undeveloped reserves here.

I don't really care how long it takes to develop because the asset (natural gas) is probably going to be worth more next year than it is today.

You should talk to your investment advisor.....I'm not one. I'm just an oilman.
Jay,

Are you buying for yourself or for a group of investors?
For myself
I am a landman in Shreveport, LA. with 30 + years of experience in the exploration and production business in NW Louisiana. I know the geologist that generated this prospect. I know the reservoir engineer that made the volume projections in the press releases.

We have and old saying that pertains to the relative veracity of statements made by certain individuals.

For example, a person with little authority might be called “top water”, or “lite in the loafers.”

That is not the case here.

These folks are the real deal.

If these people say its Easter, I paint my eggs.

I’m painting eggs by actively buying MNLU


Sentiment : Strong Buy
Then, there's the CV & HOSS:

PRESS RELEASE
Report Shows Proved Undeveloped Reserves (PUD) of 2.143 BCF Gas From Hosston/Cotton Valley Zones on Mainland Resources' First Desoto Parish, Louisiana Well


Last update: 9:15 a.m. EST Dec. 16, 2008
HOUSTON, Dec 16, 2008 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ -- Mainland Resources, Inc., a Nevada corporation (the "Company") (MNLU:mainland res inc com
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Last: 5.68+1.68+42.00%

3:59pm 02/05/2009

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MNLU 5.68, +1.68, +42.0%) reports that it has received a Reserve Report prepared pursuant to U.S. Securities legislation by T.W. McQuire & Associates, Inc, Petroleum Consultants based on data from its Griffith 11 #1 test well currently being drilled.
The Reserve Report places Ultimate Recovery for the Hosston Package at 1265 MMCFG and for the Cotton Valley Package at 878 MMCFG, for a total of 2143 MMCFG (2.143 Billion cubic feet of gas) from a single future twin to the current well. This estimate is based on 40-acre well spacing.
Mainland Resources, Inc. holds a 100% working interest in all rights above the base of the Cotton Valley formation in approximately 2,695 net acres in De Soto Parish, northwest Louisiana. The Griffith 11 #1 is located in Holly Field, and will extend the field on the east flank. It is adjacent to producing sections located to the north and west, and is the first and only Hosston/Cotton Valley well drilled in Sec 11-13N-14W.
The Hosston and Cotton Valley wells are being drilled on a 40-acre spacing. One unit equals 640 acres (or one section), so there could be up to 16 wells drilled per 640 acres. This approach has been successful in the adjacent Holly Field and the nearby Bethany Longstreet and Kingston Fields. Sections of the Holly/Bethany Longstreet/Kingston Field areas that do not have 16 wells drilled are expected to eventually reach that number of well density. Earlier wells were only drilled to the Hosston, therefore, there are numerous infill wells being drilled to the Cotton Valley depth (which is immediately below Hosston).
Company President, Mike Newport states, "This Reserve Report places the Total Proved Undeveloped Reserve at 2.143 BCF gas for a single 40-acre spaced well on our DeSoto Parish Leases. That's currently worth approximately USD $10,715,000, based on $5 gas pricing. Mainland's net revenue interest is approximately 75% covering our leasehold, which would net a potential $8,036,250 profit per well, less the applicable drilling/completion costs and production costs. There is room for at least 64 such wells on our leasehold interest, which calculates out as a potential profit of $514,320,000, less applicable drilling/completion costs and production costs from the Hosston/Cotton Valley formations alone." Newport adds, "There is no guarantee that the Company will achieve any such results or profits and the figures provided herein are estimates of management based upon analysis of the data."
"This development is important because it gives our current reserves significant value, regardless of the Haynesville shale gas production, which is the next target we are drilling to," states Newport. "

One more thing..............

The McQuire firm is known to be VERY conservative. (They press their underwear...:-)
Jay,

Based on the released information, what would the EUR be per section in this particular field?
What's EUR?

JM
2.1 Bcf per well on the CV/HOSS duals on 40 acre spacing over 2700 acres. ....do the math.

Who knows on the Haynesville...reservoir is new ... I have no idea, check the engineering data available form Deutch Bank and others.

Return is pretty front loaded...IP's are high but decline curve is steep
Why are you buying if you have no idea of the return on your investment?

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