deltic stock is going nuts i guess because they have such a huge
mineral interest in the brown dense area and the leasing companies
are still going full bore so i would conclude that the well is a smoker.
anyone else have any insight?
Tags:
Herman, I can tell you where the small operators were. They were busy telling everyone there was nothing to any talk about any wells being any good in Northern La or Southern Arkansas. You can go back and read all the propaganda back for several years.
Now they are unhappy because they must have sold themselves on the idea there was no hope for Southern Ark or norhtern La. . Oh well maybe next time.
Herman and Tom:
The small operators have been drilling wells in south arkansas for years. albeit it is not the fast crazy pace you see in the HA, but we have been drilling wells.
Any comments I have made are not propoganda, but comments based on my experiances in south arkansas. We have drilles many wildcat wells and even discovered a few new fields.
The small operators do not have the resources to go out and tie up tens of thousands 9or even hundreds of thousands) of acres. We typically lease anywhere from 160-1280 acres for a new prospect, and then we actually drill it.
So far since this Brown Dense nonsense has taken off, we have had three prospects go into the file cabniet, because we can get the leases we need. Thats a minimum of three wells that probally won't be drilled.
I call it nonsense because we have these large players leaseing up tremdous amounts of land across multiple counties, taking down the abstrat plants to prevent competition, and tying up these tracts with long term leases for a play that has had only three wells drilled a hundred miles from each other. None of these wells have managed to make any substantial sustained production. They call it the brown dense for a reason. There is no porosity.
Good to know, one of those things I started thinking about after signing a lease with an absolute depth clause.
I, and my family, have land in Union Parish. We were approached last year by a group out of Arkansas wanting to bring in old wells drilled in the late 40’s that have not produced in decades. They have successfully brought one back into production and, as I understand it, plan on bringing in at least one more sometime this summer. They approached us, originally, with an “open” lease with no depth restrictions. As these are shallow wells, under 3000 feet, I put an addendum on the lease limiting their attempts to stay no deeper than 3000 feet. There was no issue with that and leases were signed. As it stands now we have a shallow well currently under production, not much but a little is better than nothing, and I have another lease, from a different group, requesting the right to explore anything deeper than 3000 feet. As of now I have not signed this lease as I have two primary concerns 1) the land man say’s he doesn’t know what formation they are interested in drilling and 2) the lease is for four years with a three year option.
386 members
27 members
455 members
440 members
400 members
244 members
149 members
358 members
63 members
119 members
© 2024 Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher). Powered by
h2 | h2 | h2 |
---|---|---|
AboutAs exciting as this is, we know that we have a responsibility to do this thing correctly. After all, we want the farm to remain a place where the family can gather for another 80 years and beyond. This site was born out of these desires. Before we started this site, googling "shale' brought up little information. Certainly nothing that was useful as we negotiated a lease. Read More |
Links |
Copyright © 2017 GoHaynesvilleShale.com