Three Sands Mac 1-22839B 1993 too shallow at TD 2340 NW Corner
Blubaugh Van Buskirk 1-20415 1973 too shallow at TD 2666 Far NE corner
Three Sands Mac 1 -22839A 1986 Miss 4900-4990’ TD 5041 perfed Miss 4900-4962 commingled with Skinner 4806-4810 LOW production P&A now
Deminex Van Buskirk 1 - 21134 1980 Miss 4820-4868’ perfed Viola & Wilcox below it. nice well. TD 5167 NE Corner
Deminex Van Buskirk 2-21304 1980 Dry hole Miss Chat 4841-4851, Miss Lime 4851-4878 TD 5210’ Went down to Wilcox
Darnell Mac 1-22839 1990 Miss 4900-4990 also Woodford to Viola
Deminex Van Buskirk 3-21305 1980 perfed Red Fork 4786-4798 right above Miss Chat 4852; Miss Solid 4868’ Woodford 4910’ Mid E half.
So the northern part of Sec 17 has Miss, just not a strong target earlier.
The southern part of Sec 17 probably has Miss, results remain to be seen. However, the Lantz 1 well by Wil-Mc in 20 right close to the northern border in NE NE NW was perfed in the Miss (about 90’ thick) and had 10 bbls/oil 45 degree gravity and 65 mcfd gas and 30 bbls water. Drilled in 1986. So it might not be fantastic, but I think the Miss is in the southern part of sec 17.
Can anyone tell me what’s going on in Sections 6 and 7? Have family that owns over 100 acres in Section 7, and none if us are educated about what to expect, especially in terms of a lease with Devon and expected production. Any help would be great!!
That’s great news and thank you for the input! What can be expected as far as consistency of production? Seems like I’ve heard people say that the wells in this area decline in production quickly.
Your first check will be your best since it will include six months of production. The wells will decline very quickly. But they will likely last a long time. The first year declines at about 50-80% into the second year. The first two years of production are the best. Then it seems to taper off and may last for 20-30 years at a very low rate. Pretty predictable after the first four or five years.
Ronald Von Wilson, I talked with Bobby in the 80’s and he did intend to hold sections by production until new technology could bring enhanced recovery, but he was ahead of his time.
Oh WOW Ron McK, that video is so fantastic, did you see them mules Sashay down the street? LOL Thanks for the great treat. When I was a kid in Bourbon County Kansas, our cars would get that stuck lotsa times.
M Barnes, Martha McMorries You two are absolutely the greatest thing that’s happened to this forum since its beginning!! Thank you both for sharing your knowledge w/all the details!!
Au contrairè, all dreamers I know, including myself, are at it all day long and most of the night. If work well into the wee morning hours with only about 4-5 hours sleep every night, and have for years, this is how I get tons and tons of stuff done. Doers then have the blueprints to put to gether, which those with vision also do. Logan County right now is filled to overflowing with it and it is a wonderful and exciting blend of dreamers who know what can be done and craftsmen who know how to put it all together and make it work in spite of the odds. Exploration and geology is equally as important, but when the bit is turning, that part is as much luck as anything. Many times it results in a total miss, many times a hit but not enough of a hit, many times a well is capped for many reasons, even if it is a good producer they have been capped, and it shall indeed happen again. But the dreamers and the really talented artists are the ones who get it all done from the beginning to the end. They are indeed opening old what was thought to be dried up wells from a hundred years ago, because they know better. It is down there and we know it.
Debbie Wright, Really interesting and enlightening stuff, and we must remember that this data is already over 8 years old, and an indicator of how far removed we are from where we have been. We simply do not even have a definite clue as to the amount of crude/nat gas we are sitting on top of, and the more we learn, the more we see the need to open our minds and eyes to the possibilities all around us. It is all so new and exciting that it is totally mind blowing and almost unbelievable, except to the dreamers who always run the show. Always.
is the Kingdom of God likened to a Mustard Seed… scientists and geologists are indeed contrating on such a thing, that of the energy contained in one of the tiniest of things, the Mustard Seed…is it possible that cities could be lighted from the oil/minerals contained in this magical parable item? Are there worlds of oil and minerals yet to be discovered that would boggle the imagnation, and they are right under our noses/feet in Logan County? We hear reports of millions of Earth like planets “out there,” what about millions of planets “in there?” How large does large get and how small is small? All of it is relative, and human scientists, even right here in Logan County, are only beginning to unlock the myriad of secrets and magic contained in the scriptures for our de-cyphering. Logan County is so exciting!
Debbie and Catherine, hope there is no Thanksgiving gas were it do not belong, but coming out of the well. LOL Anyway, our Grandfather, swore myself and my Mom to secrecy about a couple of things, until after he was gone. Rest in Peace, Grandfather, Mom and I both kept this obligation. Anyway, the story of Ruffed Grouse is a bit more complicated, and very interesting, than simply coming from our Grandfather John Robert Wright, as was the very blood of Grandpa, according to his own words at the time, was not exactly what all of us had been told for years. The story was always Cherokee, a peaceful and farming tribe and he had Osage in his veins, which is not a tribe, but part of the Cherokee Nation, all of the way back through the Trail of Tears and to the coastal region of South Carolina. Great great great great Grandfather had a Cherokee name, which I do not remember, but our Grandfather told it to Mom and myself. White eyes soldiers gave hundreds of Cherokee men the same name of John Robert Wright when they herded them on the Trail of Tears to the absolutely WORTHLESS LAND later dubbed The Sooner State. Anyway, the truth untold, is that there was a “native American” terrorist attack one night and there resulted in some Bedonkohi blood in our veins. Of course Bedonkohi Tribe is part of the Apache Nation. Neither Apache nor Cherokee are Tribes, they are both nations. How much is true? I swear I do not know, but our Grandfather was, among other things, an incredibly honest person. It was Grandmother who did allah the talking back then, I still hear her voice, but Grandfather JohnRobert just grinned sometimes. We did not know why he grinned at the time, but I do now. He talked a lot about the oil under our feet, but part of it ended up, I am sure, to the Church of God, and that is part of the real story. It will be published in my memoirs.
Thank you for your message. It is indeed a beautiful day today in Okla. It reminds me of all the Thanksgivings that we spent with my grandmother in Pawnee when I was growing up. Speaking of my grandmother. She grew up in Bartlesville and in her early 20’s she was dating two men. One owned the corner drug store and the other was one of the Phillips brothers. She thought the oil business was a little too rough so she picked the shop owner. The rest is history but it always makes me laugh when I drive by Philbrook Museum here in Tulsa. Oil has brought many blessings to this state and the people here. We are blessed twice with the rebirth of the oil industry. Happy Thanksgiving.