There have been several wells permitted in Madison County since the start of June.  These include permits by Navidad, Woodbine Acquisition Company, Bluestone Natural Resources, and CHK.  Looks like there are some vary long laterals in parts of that.  Notably, the McMahan #1H will have a lateral in excess of 7925' in the woodbine.  Now I know the woodbine is a productive formation in many areas, but I've always understood it to be a conventional reservoir.  Can anyone comment on if this appears to be regular woodbine with long laterals, tight woodbine, or something more akin to the Eagle Ford?  I've heard is called the "Eaglebine" by a few folks...

 

Thanks

 

dbob

 

Views: 1468

Replies to This Discussion

  jffree,

  I think those early finds were near Leona ----- but to tell you the truth I get totally confused as when EFS gets into Leon/Madison they start calling it "Eaglebine"/Dexter/Woodbine/Lower Woodbine etc.  ---- but I keep hearing about great H wells in those 2 counties many with over 1000 bls/day ------- hear that CHK is trying to pick up ALL the open acreage from Centerville South--- east of I45

Got another Madison County completion - Chambless #1 313-30842 a plug back that is giving 5 bbl oil, 22 mcf gas and 95 bbls of water

Leon County Completion of note Clayton #1H 289 31792 - 372 bbls oil, 1 mcf/gas, 542 bbl of water - lists as woodbine, but the completion depth on the W2 doesn't quite make sense.

 

dbob,

 This may well be a pipe dream but I have suspected for a while now that some were tailing down for gas for a gas lift for the H wells ---- is this ever done ?

What do you see that doesn't make sense about Clayton 1H (depth), dbob?  

RSS

Support GoHaynesvilleShale.com

Not a member? Get our email.

Groups



© 2024   Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher).   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service