July 14, 2010

An oil story

Rick Bass is an author who has lived a rich and interesting life. He melds his working in the oil business with the events in the Gulf and comes up with this story at the Virginia Quarterly Review:
The Hunters
I�m not writing to offer an apologia, but I have to say, life in the oilfield was wonderful. How much of that wonder was due to my youth�as well as the specific joy of youthfulness in the 1980s�and how much of the wonder was due to the nature of the work�the joy of the hunt�I cannot be sure. I think it must have been mostly the joy of the hunt, for there were old guys (there were almost never any women) who pursued the oil and gas with just as much fervor as the younger geologists.

We never called it crude, or black gold, or Texas tea. There were no clever nicknames, there was only the pure thing itself�oil if in the liquid state, or gas, if gaseous�that, and our pure and steady fever, our burning. If we ever referred to it as anything other than oil or gas, we called it pay. Four feet of pay, twenty feet of pay, thirty feet of pay. Sixty feet of pay was a lot, enough to change your life.

I worked for a small independent oil and gas company, which was owned by a wealthy individual who drilled his wells with the aid of a group of a dozen or so investors, rich people who believed in him and in us, but who were also entirely willing to stop believing if we one day ceased to be successful.

Speaking only for myself, I didn�t ever worry about that. I never mapped a prospect, never drilled a well that I didn�t believe was going to find pay. Success rates were somewhere in the neighborhood of baseball batting averages�between ten and thirty percent�but the baseball metaphor does not carry much further than that, other than perhaps the ability to salvage a game�or a career�with one certain swing, a key strike at the most critical time.

It wasn�t like baseball at all. It wasn�t like anything. The closest thing was maybe hunting�pursuing, with blind instinct and whetted desire and only a handful of clues, the hint of one�s quarry far into the wonderful wilderness of the unknown. Lands no man or woman ever saw, or ever will see, ten thousand feet below the ground. Beaches that received sunlight and warm winds hundreds of millions of years before the strange, momentary experiment of mankind arrived, cold and shivering and with neither fire nor fur. Beaches that were then buried over, still hundreds of millions of years before we first stirred, so anomalous and far from the spine of the main and older tree of life.
Take the time to read the whole thing -- you will not be disappointed. Rick's Wikipedia entry has links to some of his other writing. Hat tip to Fred at GoodShit for the link. Posted by DaveH at July 14, 2010 6:50 PM
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