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Started By
Message

Landmen?
Posted on 7/18/08 at 6:30 pm
Posted on 7/18/08 at 6:30 pm
Ok, so I got a call today from a guy at a company I won't name, but is well established. They are looking to hire some new landmen and wanted me. They will pay for the training (3 day seminar in BR).
Does anyone hear have experience in the field, and is it worth it?
Does anyone hear have experience in the field, and is it worth it?
Posted on 7/18/08 at 6:54 pm to 9Fiddy
I wouldn't want to be jumping into the pot right now. You have all these idiotic landowners who think that their 1 acre is worth freaking $200,000 for a 3 year lease. The greed has truly made some of these people delusional.
Posted on 7/18/08 at 6:58 pm to GeneralLee
quote:
I wouldn't want to be jumping into the pot right now. You have all these idiotic landowners who think that their 1 acre is worth freaking $200,000 for a 3 year lease. The greed has truly made some of these people delusional.
You mean its not?
Posted on 7/18/08 at 7:02 pm to CAD703X
quote:
You mean its not?
For probably 98% of this play, it's not. Even the most optimistic assessments have the average real value of the gas per acre at about 40,000. Why pay more than $40,000 to lease it? You see these jokers on haynesvilleshale.ning.com asking stuff like "why settle for 25% royalties when I can get 100%?" Some people really have no idea what they are talking about. Once the boundaries are more well known, there WILL be lots of people who missed out on life changing amounts of money because they let greed get the best of them. Kinda like those people on Deal or no Deal who wait to long to call it quits.
Posted on 7/18/08 at 7:18 pm to GeneralLee
If they think they want a working interest with a big energy company they are going to wish they would have signed a lease when it comes time to pay up. There are plenty of people in the Barnett Shale who thought they would do the same thing. Chief was notorious for drilling these people out. The accountants and attorneys working for the gas companies are very good at skewing things in the big companies favor, and they didn't get big by mistake.
Posted on 7/18/08 at 7:58 pm to 9Fiddy
quote:
They will pay for the training (3 day seminar in BR).
Not sure what kind of landperson you'll get with only 3 days training - it's a four year degree program at Oklahoma and at USL. Many companies only hire PLM graduates or law school graduates to be landmen.
Posted on 7/19/08 at 12:27 am to blueridgeTiger
3 day seminar???? hahaha
who is teaching it? Don Lapre?
who is teaching it? Don Lapre?
Posted on 7/19/08 at 8:32 am to blueridgeTiger
quote:
Not sure what kind of landperson you'll get with only 3 days training - it's a four year degree program at Oklahoma and at USL. Many companies only hire PLM graduates or law school graduates to be landmen.
any thoughts on whether this is a waste of a law degree or not? I know of a couple folks that went this route with BIG oil companies and are making a good deal of money, plus their hours seem better than some other law school grads. I was thinking that as long as you still take/pass the bar when you get out of law school and you are working for a reputable company, then it's not a bad route to go.
I'm sure some others on here have opinions though..just curious to hear them
Posted on 7/19/08 at 9:30 am to Feed Me Popeyes
quote:
You have all these idiotic landowners who think that their 1 acre is worth freaking $200,000 for a 3 year lease. The greed has truly made some of these people delusional
This looks like you are dealing w/ N LA, not all landowners are like this. Of course you will have your a-holes but for the most part the people are happy to lease. I work in SE Texas it is way less expensive to lease there.
I say jump on this opportunity.
Posted on 7/19/08 at 10:19 am to Feed Me Popeyes
quote:
any thoughts on whether this is a waste of a law degree or not?
Kind of an individual choice. I was a lawyer for BIG Oil, and most of the newer landmen I worked with had law degrees. Most really liked what they were doing - field work, negotiation, and such, but a few were always looking to move into actual legal work. We had a couple move into Legal Dept and they worked out well.
Posted on 7/19/08 at 7:20 pm to Feed Me Popeyes
I'll jump in as to the law degree - I'm an attorney who worked as a landman in the early '80s. I loved it! But I will say that as "just" a landman, you won't weather the downturns of the industry as well, or at least I didn't. The company landmen and the legal staff of the companies will fare better in the lean years.
When I got into the game during that last boom, it was after much of the leasing activity had occurred, and the drilling had begun. I was working as a curative title person, which I really did like more than the cutthroat leasing business. The field work was fun - I did like doing the investigative end of it, walking old property lines to do an affadavit of ownership, researching heirs for unleased interests, etc. I like running chains of title, which some people think is insane of me. I believe strongly that every attorney needs to learn how to run a chain of title, at least in a rudimentary sense, and I've taught more attorneys how to do so than I can count.
I shake my head at how much easier it all must be these days. Word processing to prepare a lease - no more tearing up 4 pages of carbon paper lease forms! GPS and Google maps to find addresses. The internet to search for names. Satellite maps to see property lines.
Go for it. I must say, I might not have loved the work as much if I had had to travel a lot. I was able to stick close to home - north Louisiana territory was all I ever covered.
I've spent the last 25 years doing legal work as far removed from that as possible; I'm a public interest lawyer. That said, if anyone could use a notary in the field (I'm in DeSoto Parish) or someone to do some follow-up work on a part time basis, email me at rita205 at yahoo.com.
When I got into the game during that last boom, it was after much of the leasing activity had occurred, and the drilling had begun. I was working as a curative title person, which I really did like more than the cutthroat leasing business. The field work was fun - I did like doing the investigative end of it, walking old property lines to do an affadavit of ownership, researching heirs for unleased interests, etc. I like running chains of title, which some people think is insane of me. I believe strongly that every attorney needs to learn how to run a chain of title, at least in a rudimentary sense, and I've taught more attorneys how to do so than I can count.
I shake my head at how much easier it all must be these days. Word processing to prepare a lease - no more tearing up 4 pages of carbon paper lease forms! GPS and Google maps to find addresses. The internet to search for names. Satellite maps to see property lines.
Go for it. I must say, I might not have loved the work as much if I had had to travel a lot. I was able to stick close to home - north Louisiana territory was all I ever covered.
I've spent the last 25 years doing legal work as far removed from that as possible; I'm a public interest lawyer. That said, if anyone could use a notary in the field (I'm in DeSoto Parish) or someone to do some follow-up work on a part time basis, email me at rita205 at yahoo.com.
This post was edited on 7/19/08 at 7:28 pm
Posted on 8/6/08 at 10:57 pm to 9Fiddy
FYI. That course is about $4000, and if they will pay for it then do it. Alot of work to be had up here. It's a skill you can take anywhere in the country and find a job.
Posted on 8/8/08 at 8:50 am to TigerDog83
TD ~ Glad to see you're still posting. . . I noticed the Haynesville thread pretty much died out once the one with the gift of bloviation took over. I definitely understand what you're saying about the greed factor. Our family has been offered $2000 an acre bonus which we thought was a very generous offer, but they're only offering 20% royalty instead of the 25% that seems to have become fairly standard. Everyone keeps warning us that difference of 5% can be a HUGE difference. I would appreciate your thoughts on that. Also, have you heard any credible info regarding the Messenger well ~ we've been told repeatedly that the success of our area depends largely on the success of the Messenger well (although we're also not all that far from the Martin Field in Red River Parish.)
Posted on 8/8/08 at 10:48 am to blueridgeTiger
quote:
Most really liked what they were doing - field work, negotiation, and such, but a few were always looking to move into actual legal work. We had a couple move into Legal Dept and they worked out well.
Did you ever run across folks who went the other route (from spending a few years doing "actual legal work" to becoming a landman)?
Posted on 8/8/08 at 10:56 am to blueridgeTiger
quote:
at Oklahoma and at USL
you're showing your age blueridge.
Posted on 8/8/08 at 11:04 am to SEC CHAMP
quote:
at Oklahoma and at USL
you're showing your age blueridge.
It will always be USL to me.
Posted on 8/8/08 at 11:38 am to SEC CHAMP
At least I quit referring to it as SLI.
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