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important read for my American friends.You must prepare yourselves and family for coming troubling times. STock up on EVERYTHING! Wow,you thought things were bad now with gas,this read is from Qoil board,which I swiped from ihub tnog board.Serious stuff.
2 MUST READ re-posts from QOIL board:
#1
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=7579967
---------------------------
Twenty oil rigs missing in Gulf of Mexico - Coast Guard
08.31.2005, 08:38 PM
http://www.forbes.com/finance/feeds/afx/2005/08/31/afx2200323.html
WASHINGTON (AFX) - At least 20 oil rigs and platforms are missing in the Gulf of Mexico and a ruptured gas pipeline is on fire after Hurricane Katrina hit the region, Agence France-Presse reported, citing a source from a US Coast Guard unit operating in the area.
'We have confirmed at least 20 rigs or platforms missing, either sunk or adrift, and one confirmed fire where a rig was,' Petty Officer Robert Reed told AFP.
The missing rigs were in the Gulf of Mexico, Reed said, citing Coast Guard overflights of the area and information from oil companies.
He could not confirm the location of the blaze but said it would 'eventually burn out' and no fire-fighting intervention was needed.
'We are of course working on the environmental side of things but right now we are still concentrating on search-and-rescue missions to save as many lives as possible on land,' said Reed, whose Coast Guard unit has been evacuated from the flooded city of New Orleans to Alexandria, Louisiana.
According to the latest tally Wednesday from the federal Minerals Management Service, a total of 561 platforms and rigs have been evacuated in the Gulf of Mexico, which accounts for a quarter of US oil production.
Over 91 pct of normal daily crude oil production in the Gulf -- 1.5 mln barrels -- is now shut down, and more than 83 pct of natural gas production, the MMS said.
Among the firms reporting missing rigs was Newfield Exploration Company, which said an aerial survey of its operations in the eastern Gulf showed that one of its platforms at Main Pass 138 'appears to have been lost in the storm.'
'As of this morning, boats and helicopters are mobilizing to better access damages, identify any environmental impacts and begin the repair process,' Newfield said in a statement.
Noble Corp said its semi-submersible rig Noble Jim Thompson, which was contracted to a unit of Anglo-Dutch giant Shell, had broken loose and was 17 miles adrift of its normal Gulf location.
Shell's Mars platform was said by analysts to have suffered 'extensive damage'.
'Some of our facilities have been damaged and production is halted while we begin assessments and run checks,' Shell chief executive Jeroen van der Veer said.
On shore, at least eight refineries have been shut down on the coasts of Louisiana and Mississippi since Katrina roared ashore early Monday just east of New Orleans.
Many other refineries are struggling to cope with shortfalls of crude caused by the closure of major port terminals and pipelines from evacuated and missing rigs in the Gulf of Mexico.
In response, the US government prepared Wednesday to open its emergency oil reserves for the first time in a year to keep supplies running to those refineries still operating.
-----------------------------------------
#2
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=7579983
----------------------------
Newest (and very informative and very scary) report from an anonymous insider
Posted by Prof. Goose in Supply/Production
Wed Aug 31 at 11:35 AM EST
http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2005/8/31/83553/8973
This is from an oil industry insider I consider quite credible. She was definitely right about everything in her last post. If she's right about this one, we may finally start to get a true picture of what's going on.
There are MANY production platforms missing (as in not visible from the air). This means they have been totally lost. I am talking about 10's of platforms, not single digit numbers. Each platform can have from 4 to 100+ wells on it. Most larger ones have 20-30 wells in this area, with numerous caisson wells. They are on their sides, on the bottom of the gulf - they will likely be left as reef material, provided we can get permission. MMS regulations require us to plug each of the wells that were on these platforms - HUGE cost now, as the platforms are gone... Hopefully, MMS will grant `abandon in place' status for these wiped out structures.
We also set individual wells as satellites and pipe them back to existing platforms. These stand-alone wells are called caisson wells. 90% of those in the storm path are bent over, rendering them a total loss, We would have to remove the existing bent structure and drill a new well, as bent pipe is basically unusable.
We utilize platforms as gathering hubs. We pipe the raw oil/water to them and then send it on for separation, or separate it there and send finished oil on. Damage to a hub means everything going to the hub is offline indefinitely. There are +/- 15 HUBS missing. MISSING!! As in we cannot find them from the air.
Thus even if the wells feeding the hub are ok, we have nowhere to pump the oil to...
The jackup drilling rigs appear to be in various stages of damage, but most rode the storm out with minimal problems. However, each of them has shifted position.
When we jack the rig up, it is carefully positioned directly over the well slot where we are working. The derrick has rails that allow us to slide it in 4 directions to get the derrick directly over the well or slot. If the rig moves (right/left, or from level to uneven), it has to be jacked back down to the waterline and repositioned with tugboats, then jacked back up. After it is back up and level, the derrick is slid on the 2 sets of rails, and bolted into position over the well or slot again.
Thus we have to reset each of the drilling rigs, which requires getting OUT of the well, tugboats and a move, then getting back into the well. The open hole we have drilled (what is not enclosed in cemented casing) is likely to be lost, and if the wellhead or the casing is bent, then the well will have to be redrilled. This is an exploration setback of at least a month, but we don't yet know the boat situation.
Boats are usually brought into harbor to weather storms. We do not have a boat count yet, but from the initial reports, we may have lost or grounded 30% of the Gulf of Mexico fleet. This means everything will cost more, take longer - repairs, repositioning, everything.
In short, the Gulf area hit by the storm is basically in about the same shape as Biloxi. The damage numbers you have gotten from the government and analysts are, in my opinion, much too low. We are looking at YEARS to return to the production levels we had prior to the storm. The eastern Gulf of Mexico is primarily oil production...
Loss of the MARS platform alone cost us 95,000 barrels a day for a year or maybe more.
YEARS, people. I know what this means - hope everyone else gets it too...
Click here ( http://photos.msn.com/ImageServer/Image.aspx?Image=mqkSFy3d5JBEa9uAisxRbsWAnfZiex2MQgnQfv29eR62gqWwb.... ) to go to an image of a destroyed rig.
The front page of the Houston Chronicle has a rig beached on Dauphin Island. The legs have been sheared off and derrick is missing – thus it is a total loss. This rig was operating in Main Pass (adjacent to Plaquemines Parish), and thus was blown to Alabama and beached.
Update [2005-8-31 10:6:22 by Prof. Goose]:The insider asked me to attach this article to her post ( http://www.dailyreckoning.com/RudeAwake/Articles/RA083105.html ).
Land oil stocks to pick up no doubt - important read for all.
Wow,you thought things were bad now with gas,this read is from Qoil board,which I swiped from ihub tnog board.Serious stuff.
2 MUST READ re-posts from QOIL board:
#1
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=7579967
---------------------------
Twenty oil rigs missing in Gulf of Mexico - Coast Guard
08.31.2005, 08:38 PM
http://www.forbes.com/finance/feeds/afx/2005/08/31/afx2200323.html
WASHINGTON (AFX) - At least 20 oil rigs and platforms are missing in the Gulf of Mexico and a ruptured gas pipeline is on fire after Hurricane Katrina hit the region, Agence France-Presse reported, citing a source from a US Coast Guard unit operating in the area.
'We have confirmed at least 20 rigs or platforms missing, either sunk or adrift, and one confirmed fire where a rig was,' Petty Officer Robert Reed told AFP.
The missing rigs were in the Gulf of Mexico, Reed said, citing Coast Guard overflights of the area and information from oil companies.
He could not confirm the location of the blaze but said it would 'eventually burn out' and no fire-fighting intervention was needed.
'We are of course working on the environmental side of things but right now we are still concentrating on search-and-rescue missions to save as many lives as possible on land,' said Reed, whose Coast Guard unit has been evacuated from the flooded city of New Orleans to Alexandria, Louisiana.
According to the latest tally Wednesday from the federal Minerals Management Service, a total of 561 platforms and rigs have been evacuated in the Gulf of Mexico, which accounts for a quarter of US oil production.
Over 91 pct of normal daily crude oil production in the Gulf -- 1.5 mln barrels -- is now shut down, and more than 83 pct of natural gas production, the MMS said.
Among the firms reporting missing rigs was Newfield Exploration Company, which said an aerial survey of its operations in the eastern Gulf showed that one of its platforms at Main Pass 138 'appears to have been lost in the storm.'
'As of this morning, boats and helicopters are mobilizing to better access damages, identify any environmental impacts and begin the repair process,' Newfield said in a statement.
Noble Corp said its semi-submersible rig Noble Jim Thompson, which was contracted to a unit of Anglo-Dutch giant Shell, had broken loose and was 17 miles adrift of its normal Gulf location.
Shell's Mars platform was said by analysts to have suffered 'extensive damage'.
'Some of our facilities have been damaged and production is halted while we begin assessments and run checks,' Shell chief executive Jeroen van der Veer said.
On shore, at least eight refineries have been shut down on the coasts of Louisiana and Mississippi since Katrina roared ashore early Monday just east of New Orleans.
Many other refineries are struggling to cope with shortfalls of crude caused by the closure of major port terminals and pipelines from evacuated and missing rigs in the Gulf of Mexico.
In response, the US government prepared Wednesday to open its emergency oil reserves for the first time in a year to keep supplies running to those refineries still operating.
-----------------------------------------
#2
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=7579983
----------------------------
Newest (and very informative and very scary) report from an anonymous insider
Posted by Prof. Goose in Supply/Production
Wed Aug 31 at 11:35 AM EST
http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2005/8/31/83553/8973
This is from an oil industry insider I consider quite credible. She was definitely right about everything in her last post. If she's right about this one, we may finally start to get a true picture of what's going on.
There are MANY production platforms missing (as in not visible from the air). This means they have been totally lost. I am talking about 10's of platforms, not single digit numbers. Each platform can have from 4 to 100+ wells on it. Most larger ones have 20-30 wells in this area, with numerous caisson wells. They are on their sides, on the bottom of the gulf - they will likely be left as reef material, provided we can get permission. MMS regulations require us to plug each of the wells that were on these platforms - HUGE cost now, as the platforms are gone... Hopefully, MMS will grant `abandon in place' status for these wiped out structures.
We also set individual wells as satellites and pipe them back to existing platforms. These stand-alone wells are called caisson wells. 90% of those in the storm path are bent over, rendering them a total loss, We would have to remove the existing bent structure and drill a new well, as bent pipe is basically unusable.
We utilize platforms as gathering hubs. We pipe the raw oil/water to them and then send it on for separation, or separate it there and send finished oil on. Damage to a hub means everything going to the hub is offline indefinitely. There are +/- 15 HUBS missing. MISSING!! As in we cannot find them from the air.
Thus even if the wells feeding the hub are ok, we have nowhere to pump the oil to...
The jackup drilling rigs appear to be in various stages of damage, but most rode the storm out with minimal problems. However, each of them has shifted position.
When we jack the rig up, it is carefully positioned directly over the well slot where we are working. The derrick has rails that allow us to slide it in 4 directions to get the derrick directly over the well or slot. If the rig moves (right/left, or from level to uneven), it has to be jacked back down to the waterline and repositioned with tugboats, then jacked back up. After it is back up and level, the derrick is slid on the 2 sets of rails, and bolted into position over the well or slot again.
Thus we have to reset each of the drilling rigs, which requires getting OUT of the well, tugboats and a move, then getting back into the well. The open hole we have drilled (what is not enclosed in cemented casing) is likely to be lost, and if the wellhead or the casing is bent, then the well will have to be redrilled. This is an exploration setback of at least a month, but we don't yet know the boat situation.
Boats are usually brought into harbor to weather storms. We do not have a boat count yet, but from the initial reports, we may have lost or grounded 30% of the Gulf of Mexico fleet. This means everything will cost more, take longer - repairs, repositioning, everything.
In short, the Gulf area hit by the storm is basically in about the same shape as Biloxi. The damage numbers you have gotten from the government and analysts are, in my opinion, much too low. We are looking at YEARS to return to the production levels we had prior to the storm. The eastern Gulf of Mexico is primarily oil production...
Loss of the MARS platform alone cost us 95,000 barrels a day for a year or maybe more.
YEARS, people. I know what this means - hope everyone else gets it too...
Click here ( http://photos.msn.com/ImageServer/Image.aspx?Image=mqkSFy3d5JBEa9uAisxRbsWAnfZiex2MQgnQfv29eR62gqWwb.... ) to go to an image of a destroyed rig.
The front page of the Houston Chronicle has a rig beached on Dauphin Island. The legs have been sheared off and derrick is missing – thus it is a total loss. This rig was operating in Main Pass (adjacent to Plaquemines Parish), and thus was blown to Alabama and beached.
Update [2005-8-31 10:6:22 by Prof. Goose]:The insider asked me to attach this article to her post ( http://www.dailyreckoning.com/RudeAwake/Articles/RA083105.html ).
Good Mornin Sublime. Up early board hopping and came across a read from qoil board. While not anything to do with bcit, I would like to post it anyway,so all boarders here can fully understand the impact of the hurricane, and what it may mean to your families and friends. The gas shortages have not begun in earnest which means severe hardship for many. Florida running out of gas as well as many other states, gas being reserved only for emergency services like firetrucks, ambulances etc....it looks like all of America will have to pull together to survive this one, and of course we in CAnada are ready and willing to help...
Wow,you thought things were bad now with gas,this read is from Qoil board,which I swiped from ihub tnog board.Serious stuff.
2 MUST READ re-posts from QOIL board:
#1
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=7579967
---------------------------
Twenty oil rigs missing in Gulf of Mexico - Coast Guard
08.31.2005, 08:38 PM
http://www.forbes.com/finance/feeds/afx/2005/08/31/afx2200323.html
WASHINGTON (AFX) - At least 20 oil rigs and platforms are missing in the Gulf of Mexico and a ruptured gas pipeline is on fire after Hurricane Katrina hit the region, Agence France-Presse reported, citing a source from a US Coast Guard unit operating in the area.
'We have confirmed at least 20 rigs or platforms missing, either sunk or adrift, and one confirmed fire where a rig was,' Petty Officer Robert Reed told AFP.
The missing rigs were in the Gulf of Mexico, Reed said, citing Coast Guard overflights of the area and information from oil companies.
He could not confirm the location of the blaze but said it would 'eventually burn out' and no fire-fighting intervention was needed.
'We are of course working on the environmental side of things but right now we are still concentrating on search-and-rescue missions to save as many lives as possible on land,' said Reed, whose Coast Guard unit has been evacuated from the flooded city of New Orleans to Alexandria, Louisiana.
According to the latest tally Wednesday from the federal Minerals Management Service, a total of 561 platforms and rigs have been evacuated in the Gulf of Mexico, which accounts for a quarter of US oil production.
Over 91 pct of normal daily crude oil production in the Gulf -- 1.5 mln barrels -- is now shut down, and more than 83 pct of natural gas production, the MMS said.
Among the firms reporting missing rigs was Newfield Exploration Company, which said an aerial survey of its operations in the eastern Gulf showed that one of its platforms at Main Pass 138 'appears to have been lost in the storm.'
'As of this morning, boats and helicopters are mobilizing to better access damages, identify any environmental impacts and begin the repair process,' Newfield said in a statement.
Noble Corp said its semi-submersible rig Noble Jim Thompson, which was contracted to a unit of Anglo-Dutch giant Shell, had broken loose and was 17 miles adrift of its normal Gulf location.
Shell's Mars platform was said by analysts to have suffered 'extensive damage'.
'Some of our facilities have been damaged and production is halted while we begin assessments and run checks,' Shell chief executive Jeroen van der Veer said.
On shore, at least eight refineries have been shut down on the coasts of Louisiana and Mississippi since Katrina roared ashore early Monday just east of New Orleans.
Many other refineries are struggling to cope with shortfalls of crude caused by the closure of major port terminals and pipelines from evacuated and missing rigs in the Gulf of Mexico.
In response, the US government prepared Wednesday to open its emergency oil reserves for the first time in a year to keep supplies running to those refineries still operating.
-----------------------------------------
#2
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=7579983
----------------------------
Newest (and very informative and very scary) report from an anonymous insider
Posted by Prof. Goose in Supply/Production
Wed Aug 31 at 11:35 AM EST
http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2005/8/31/83553/8973
This is from an oil industry insider I consider quite credible. She was definitely right about everything in her last post. If she's right about this one, we may finally start to get a true picture of what's going on.
There are MANY production platforms missing (as in not visible from the air). This means they have been totally lost. I am talking about 10's of platforms, not single digit numbers. Each platform can have from 4 to 100+ wells on it. Most larger ones have 20-30 wells in this area, with numerous caisson wells. They are on their sides, on the bottom of the gulf - they will likely be left as reef material, provided we can get permission. MMS regulations require us to plug each of the wells that were on these platforms - HUGE cost now, as the platforms are gone... Hopefully, MMS will grant `abandon in place' status for these wiped out structures.
We also set individual wells as satellites and pipe them back to existing platforms. These stand-alone wells are called caisson wells. 90% of those in the storm path are bent over, rendering them a total loss, We would have to remove the existing bent structure and drill a new well, as bent pipe is basically unusable.
We utilize platforms as gathering hubs. We pipe the raw oil/water to them and then send it on for separation, or separate it there and send finished oil on. Damage to a hub means everything going to the hub is offline indefinitely. There are +/- 15 HUBS missing. MISSING!! As in we cannot find them from the air.
Thus even if the wells feeding the hub are ok, we have nowhere to pump the oil to...
The jackup drilling rigs appear to be in various stages of damage, but most rode the storm out with minimal problems. However, each of them has shifted position.
When we jack the rig up, it is carefully positioned directly over the well slot where we are working. The derrick has rails that allow us to slide it in 4 directions to get the derrick directly over the well or slot. If the rig moves (right/left, or from level to uneven), it has to be jacked back down to the waterline and repositioned with tugboats, then jacked back up. After it is back up and level, the derrick is slid on the 2 sets of rails, and bolted into position over the well or slot again.
Thus we have to reset each of the drilling rigs, which requires getting OUT of the well, tugboats and a move, then getting back into the well. The open hole we have drilled (what is not enclosed in cemented casing) is likely to be lost, and if the wellhead or the casing is bent, then the well will have to be redrilled. This is an exploration setback of at least a month, but we don't yet know the boat situation.
Boats are usually brought into harbor to weather storms. We do not have a boat count yet, but from the initial reports, we may have lost or grounded 30% of the Gulf of Mexico fleet. This means everything will cost more, take longer - repairs, repositioning, everything.
In short, the Gulf area hit by the storm is basically in about the same shape as Biloxi. The damage numbers you have gotten from the government and analysts are, in my opinion, much too low. We are looking at YEARS to return to the production levels we had prior to the storm. The eastern Gulf of Mexico is primarily oil production...
Loss of the MARS platform alone cost us 95,000 barrels a day for a year or maybe more.
YEARS, people. I know what this means - hope everyone else gets it too...
Click here ( http://photos.msn.com/ImageServer/Image.aspx?Image=mqkSFy3d5JBEa9uAisxRbsWAnfZiex2MQgnQfv29eR62gqWwb.... ) to go to an image of a destroyed rig.
The front page of the Houston Chronicle has a rig beached on Dauphin Island. The legs have been sheared off and derrick is missing – thus it is a total loss. This rig was operating in Main Pass (adjacent to Plaquemines Parish), and thus was blown to Alabama and beached.
Update [2005-8-31 10:6:22 by Prof. Goose]:The insider asked me to attach this article to her post ( http://www.dailyreckoning.com/RudeAwake/Articles/RA083105.html ).
Mornin', Who the heck is up this early? We are nuts.Especially on a stock that is nottrading but yes I think pr's are allowed as it is mentioned by SEC in the halt.
Geez folks. Yeah, I can imagine Megas blowing off his good name and reputation for a couple of million. After all he is tired of real estate eh? Tired of the multi-million dollar deals his hard work and good name provide.
bcit has gone from being a pimple on his azz,to a full blown case of hemorroids for him, and as such must surely interfere with his real business....
Brits have a lot of pride, and set a lot by their name. We can all guess and chew the fat, but it is his business rep on line here. I dont think he wants to be done in by the "Yanks" as much as he is set up to be the first ever to move SEC off their ass. I'd be proud to have shares in his company if I had a legitimate chance. The only one in history to get sec to do right thing...or moving in that direction anyway.
Too bad it took a Brit to do it but hey, we lucked out getting him for a CEO. Just my two cents....dont mind me. P.
I hear no mention of "indy" made in reference which Megas reports as only valids...did I miss something? P.
nttl chart -news is better!:http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/SC.web?c=NTTL,uu[m,a]waolyyay[pb50!b200][vc60][iUf!Lk14]&pref...
not too mention the fact of time difference...
OT: serf: then give'im hell....tnog good enuff company dont need him. on the other hand we could use all the help we can get LOL
OT: Serf: gonna give novak (tnog)grief again??? You are in aintcha?
Dont know, was it serf that posted it?? Someone help me out on this, but I believe it was halted. Point of the post I believe. Gonna go play with tnog and amep for a while. Bye.
What about that Cobalis post??? underwent name change and zoom.
If there ever was a big story for newspapers and magazines...this would be it. There is a fella from pinksheets something or other that is sueing sec???
Maybe Dateline hahaha.
donk:who was the numbskull screaming ALERT!!! Seems that person isnt operating up to speed.
By: mizzmuze
31 Aug 2005, 09:40 AM EDT
Msg. 6117 of 6119
Jump to msg. #
Here is an excerpt from an email I just got from the SEC:
Also, I've been told a press release is coming out regarding this issue. If you check our website at www.sec.gov and click on Trading Suspensions, you
will be able to read the specifics involved in the suspension when it comes out.
Thank you for contacting the SEC.
OT: hurricane Katrina: I hope we havent lost any boarders to the effects of the storm, your Northern cousins have prayers for you. No doubt we will be there to help re-build and assist as we can, I know Hydro One in Ontario is ready to help restore power to essential services when requested.If you need help just holler...
Penn.
Good luck to all, here in Hamilton Ontario it is not bad but expecting it to get worse up until about 12:30. Penn.
They are kind of pricey,but I havent had any crap from them, and the fees arent much when compared to my profits (as I figure them in as cost).
Took the risk outta this one some time back so I can sit back and relax, watch the fun. I always get a kick outta the "weak hands" line. I have a system with rules. Trading demands discipline. Good luck to all still holding millions. P.
TD sucks? what do you use ameritrade haha? have fun. P.
Penni is on phone and ordering 10000 certs from tdw. Lets see what they have to say.....Not a problem, a 53 dollar fee, but tdw not accepting pink certs back. It is also at the discretion of the transfer agent, and would take a good while. hmmmm anyone wanna buy a framed cert for thirty bucks? LOL P.
Earthenperson: you are welcome - glad I could help. P.
Poor ceo Megas - must be getting a thousand emails and having to give same answer over and over again....how does he have time to deal with problems?
Hey, lets all email him so he can get NOTHING done all tied up.
Backaway: go to tdwaterhouse.com and open account. Buy all ya want. Sell all ya want. P
Mesh:
no. go ahead. Just wondering bout the double post. Will continue to share between boards. Be better to work together towards a common goal. We need all the help we can get. Information\knowledge is power...shareholders rarely have any. Have a good one. P
OT:Rmaid:
- not really...was thinking of a trying small nibble first. LOL.
thinkmesh:
is there a reason to post the ihub post I shared with rb'ers twice? I often repost rb for ihub's benefit when new information found. Just trying to share or make a point?
OT: chisox:
be funny if all MM quit buying or selling as they can do as they please. ohio tom did well on a flip, and is back in everything free. tar and feathers eh? LOL
OT:mikeymac:
ameriturd and scottrade will give everybody a different answer all day long (again). dont need bashers to tie up board. In my mind I can see them laughing their asses off. Kinda like a dog chasing its own tail,while the cat steals its food.
Sorry for the OT but this board seems to have low tolerance to any opposing views, opinions etc. Dont want to be labeled basher.
Thank God for fringes posts.
OT:Maid: - tease.
rlangmaid: cant wait till u start using pm.
Hurricane Kattrina path & times: http://www.quehubo.com/eng/hurricane_katrina.php
hurrican path and times - take care. http://www.quehubo.com/eng/hurricane_katrina.php
Hurricane Kattrina path and arrival times http://www.quehubo.com/eng/hurricane_katrina.php
Hurricane path and arrival times - get prepared - looks like Hamilton Ontario will be hit with severe weather and winds - good luck all. Penn.http://www.quehubo.com/eng/hurricane_katrina.php
Arts time is limited for a while. Keep the boards clean so he has time to post and not clean. Please.
RB or Ihub folks. u do Art no justice or respect by this constant tit for tat...time for you folks take stock of whats important on a Sunday. Turn off the computer and go pay attention to your families. See ya tomorra folks. P.
f1fans:my only question for you is...how many are they holding (available for sale)??
P. thinks bcit shares worth .40 for shell.
With the sales meter installed (needs webcam LOL)and revenues coming in, interest in TNOG drilling will increase, and the beginnings of a squeeze might happen. Shares mighty cheap at these prices as the makings of a money making machine are put into place and go online. Rising price of O&G is icing on cake. P.
Thank you stock. have a great day! P.