Sunday, February 24, 2008
Moving day...
Sunday, February 17, 2008
Shale, shale and more shale

The drill crew have been to re-piping the borehole due to multi-directional shale formations near the bottom (1492m). Shale, being an unstable formation, sluffs into the borehole and prevents the WireLine (imaging device) to reach the bottom to analyze the the completed drilling operation. Weatherford Wireline Services have left the site, so it looks like the drill crew may be preparing to move to another site soon.
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Circulation

Have been in a sour zone for about three days, maintaining circulation is important as it keeps H2S confined to the source - so far, so good.
We will be at this stage for the rest of the project.
Masks and oxygen tanks are constantly checked. While crew member clean the 'cellar', an H2S Specialist is present for any potential rescue procedures.
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
In the beginning...
So, my name is Owen and this is my blog... SlipperyMedic... currently reporting 'live' from Nabors24 Drilling Site, contracting under Industrial Paramedic Services.
Below is a summary of my first week in the petroleum industry...
2008-02-06
After getting the all-clear from my doctor, I contacted the IPS dispatch centre in Whitecourt to update them on my availability. They stated that a call-back and post would be later in the afternoon. No more than 20 minutes later, that call came and a post was determined. So after few loads of laundry and a bit of packing, I left the peace and serenity of the Valemount Pines Golf Course and headed off to the hustle and bustle of
2008-02-07
Left Whitecourt with a crew truck at 06:00, stopping to refill the coffee cup several times! Many firsts along the way… never been this far north for one,
Rig Physical location: 5-13-117-6-W6. Working under Nabors24 – a drill site that is contracting to Apache Drilling. Responsible for two 12-hour shifts with 10-12 people working each shift (07:00-19:00-07:00). Project should last another two-weeks, variables being geology, depth of drilling, etc. Then production and service rigs come on site. Not too far from an H2S pocket, everyone wears a 'sniffer'... personal H2S detector. Met my outgoing medic, an EMT-A (PCP-IV). He seemed a little squirrelly and ready for some time-off. Took me on a tour of the site. Met the consultant and geologist. Everything was new to me, of course… Doghouse, BOP, Pusher, Derrick, etc. I live in an on-site shack, while the crew travels to a camp approx.12km from the drill site. Sewer lines were frozen, but now clear. But no water until the water truck arrives.
2008-02-08
It’s -34C, clear skies. Other medic left after breakfast and I met up with the site consultant, went over Emergency Response Plan, for both the site and company policy. Had safety meeting with day-crew, will repeat with night-crew. No internet, yet. Should have brought more movies!
2008-02-09
‘Rough’ day today, steak and lobster for dinner.
2008-02-10
Routine day, until early morning, a roughneck knocked on my door at 01:40 with flu-like symptoms, slept it off in the spare room until shift change.
2008-02-11
H2S drill today at 16:30 – 3m10s to execute… all personnel were accounted for. H2S drill this evening at 21:15 – 2m57s to execute… all personnel were accounted for. If man-down was discovered, rescue and recovery would have been more than 4 minutes. Not good odds for resuscitation.

