I keep reading in all these discussions about "The Sweet Spot", does anyone REALLY and Truly know where the sweet spot is or is that a term that is meaning a general area? What is the Sweet Spot and what area is it? Does this mean all the Haynesville Shale play or is it a certain number of several S-T-R?

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Good point! IMO, one reason there is less current drilling in Bossier (which has some of the highest IP rates in the HS by HK in 16N, 11W) is that the Elm Grove field is a wonderful and prolific CV reservoir and many old leases perhaps did not have a vertical Pugh clause so they are HBP
Recent CV horizontals in Elm Grove are very good at less cost AND so far the decline rates appear to be much lower than HS projections. IMO, decline rate is the MAJOR unknown in really getting a handle of HS EUR.

It will all end up being a financial analysis decision, but CV seems to be losing. XCO seems to be moving swiftly to a HS play, after initially seeming to be loyal to the CV (Winchester legacy). Of course, when you drill five HS wells in Desoto with a average IP of 22+ mmcfd, it will cause you to re-evaluate!
The sweet spot is under my house.
Are they drilling in the actual sweet spots or simply where it's the least hassle? What will drilling costs and potential lawsuits be, pipeline costs, etc., when they start drilling in near more urbanized areas?
There are sweet spots. Are they drilling in them now? Only time will tell.
I also think you may find "core area" or "sweet spot" changing over time. In the Barnett, there was, for a long time, the Core Area in the Wise, Tarrant, Dallas counties. Then, improved technology and horizontal wells allowed us to drill and complete wells without a Viola seal barrier and BINGO! Johnson County becomes a major producing area. As more wells are drilled and more information is gathered, the sweet spot in the HS may increase in size, or contract or change shapes. Just too early to tell!
So is the southern 2 Tshps of Desoto Parish now considered out of the hottest part of the play? If so, could someone provide any info as to the success of the latest SWEPI wells in 10N-12W and the CHK wells in 11N-13&14W?? Seems like a lot of continuous drilling in this area for it not to be considered at least as a "good play" if not "sweet spot".
Companies will drill where they have leases. The "sweet spots " will emerge over time as we get production data.
Agree fully Baron. Because there is absolutely no need to get new gas volumes on the market right now, they'll focus their time on drilling where it a) helps with their lease expirations, and b) where they think they can prove/disprove the productivity of areas where they are heavily leased. Maybe see some more "science experiments" to help evaluate areas prospectivity. That way they can wade through which of their acreage is of value and what acreage they can let expire. Most companies lease a lot more acreage than they can actually drill, knowing that some of it will prove to be goat pasture while other parts are sweet! The quicker you can find the sweet spots and separate them from the goats the better.

If prices were higher I think you'd see all of this going in hyper mode; right now we are stuck on 33-1/3 (for all of those who remember long play albums (LP's).
We will see who has longest (or oldest if you see it that way) CUB memoriesr
Century? On Youree? Don't recall it. But Sooto's on E. Kings Hwy, now that's a different story. And right down the street from the Christian Union Building. LOL!
Jay. Do you remember when the corporate office of Thrifty Liquor was upstairs at the CUB?

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