0129121723.jpg

Provided by a person who can remain anonymous - taken within the past few days. 

Drilling rig is visible on site, as well as what appears to be three distinct pits.  Not sure what the one in the foreground is being used for, as this appears to be atypical.  Also, as a general comment, they sized the pad a bit small for everything on it.  Landowner probably won't be happy about the extra footprint in his pasture.

Views: 2374

Replies to This Discussion

Attached photo was collected by the Air Force X-37B test bed within the last 48 hours.  May have more later, depending on availability of the data feed from Barksdale.  

Photo shows a hydraulic pump system on the well - that's the tall thing - based on height, and size, its pretty big. Kinda like a pump jack, but easier/faster to deploy.   Object to right is a heater-treater.  Tanks on the north, suggest a configuration with 3 tanks of water, one of oil, or the other way around.  size of tanks is either 300 bbls or 400 bbls - may have to do some measurement later to figure is out (300 bbl tank is d=12' x h= 15', 400 bbl is d=12' x  h=20'  Data reports also suggest small flare over pit - no pipeline connection for gas yet.  

Hopefully the NSA will stop blocking the transmission - 2 photos should attach

Attachments:

  Thanks dbob,

    Looks like a short line running out from the separator to that old well site ------- if it is for gas why are they burning a flair ?    There may be a SWD infield nearby could that line be for water straight out of the separator ?   Does that pump have Sucker-rods & down hole pump ?

  Think we might need a little help evaluating this one maybe someone will pitch in

Additional photo came through today - it does look like they are pipelining back to the compressor station.  I don't think the full well site is built yet - I think the large vessel is a heater-treater, and I don't see a separator.  Maybe its possible to vent the heater-treater to the flare?

The linear feature on the right hand side of the road almost looks like an open trench for a pipeline.  

Attachments:

dbob,jffree

  If this is a Key well for Houston County wonder why they did not build a large frac pond and frac it with the big stage fracs etc ---- saw a few portable frac tanks here a while back but not the volume we have seen elsewhere.  Wonder if Drilling Info is picking up anything here ?

 Parten Filed for a permit to re-complete a Water Well just to the west of this Dexter H Well today could be getting ready for some heavy fracing in this field or as dbob says maybe a water flood

Does anyone know how this Hydraulic Pump works on this Parten Well ?

Not entirely sure - here is one manufacturer's website

http://www.icisolutions.ca/

Look at Why Buy ICI?

RSS

Support GoHaynesvilleShale.com

Blog Posts

History of GoHaynesvilleShale

The History of GoHaynesvilleShale.com

GoHaynesvilleShale.com (GHS) was launched in 2008 during a pivotal moment in the energy industry, when the Haynesville Shale formation—a massive natural gas reserve lying beneath parts of northwest Louisiana, east Texas, and southwest Arkansas—was beginning to attract national attention. The website was the brainchild of Keith Mauck, a landowner and entrepreneur who recognized a pressing need: landowners in the region had little access to…

Continue

Posted by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher) on May 21, 2025 at 6:00

Not a member? Get our email.

Groups



© 2025   Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher).   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service