Saturday, December 24, 2011

Merry Christmas, and to all: A Happy New Year

Baby, Please Come Home, Darlene Love

14 comments:

  1. Same to you, Bruce and your family. Thanks for keeping all of us updated and educated on the Bakken!

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  2. Bruce, Have a great Christmas and even better New Year. Thanks for making an interesting contribution to my day, everyday!

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  3. Ditto...from all anonymous

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  4. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  5. Merry Christmas to All.. Thanks Bruce

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  6. Thank you to everyone! It's been a great year. I've learned a lot from all of you. I appreciate your links and insights.

    2012 should be a great year.

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  7. May this Christmas fill your heart with joy and your New Year be full of happiness.

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  8. embraceyourinnerhillbillyDecember 26, 2011 at 4:54 PM

    Greatest Rock era Xmas song ever. Thank you.

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  9. It really is, isn't it?

    And if you read Darlene Love's bio, there's just something very appropriate that she was the one who made this song a hit.

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  10. Finally figured how to respond.Enjoy your blog.I just retired after 55 years in oil patch.Went through the 3 Williston Basin booms although the first was spent as a Bell Hop at the Plainsman Hotel.Old guys appreciate a little nostalgia that you provide.This activity is like no other.After all is said and done in the Bakken play,secondary recovery using the horizontal laterals for injection will provide another bonanza to the Williston Basin.Keep up the good work,and have a happy and prosperous New Year.

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  11. Thank you for your very kind comments. Sometime ago I was told I should stick to just the "facts," and not get into personal thoughts or nostalgia, but I think you are correct. Folks like blogs to have a personal touch.

    I really enjoy Mike Filloon's analysis of the Bakken, and I wouldn't want him to change, but one of the reasons he is enjoyable to read, that over time one starts to get a bit of a feeling for his personality, too.

    Congrats after 55 years in the oil patch. That has to be some kind of record. It took a lot of folks to keep the Williston Basin going.

    Bell Hop at the Plainsman. Wow. I don't remember the bell hops; I probably first went to the Plainsman for dinner in the mid-1960s. What a great experience. I guess it gradually changed from a hotel to a long-term residence. It is still a landmark in Williston.

    You know, I was so naive growing up, I never thought why the "Plainsman" was so named.

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  12. embraceyourinnerhillbillyDecember 27, 2011 at 12:45 AM

    >>>Thank you for your very kind comments. Sometime ago I was told I should stick to just the "facts," and not get into personal thoughts or nostalgia, but I think you are correct. Folks like blogs to have a personal touch.<<<

    I personal/nostalgia comments, it adds a deeper meaning/understanding of the folks who live in ND and the challenges faced as this Oil boom takes root. Plus it adds color to the stories.
    People will whine and bitch about anything...you provide this service as a labor of love, there's no subscription fee, no ads(though that would be cool, it's YOUR website, make a buck, it's the American way)...if folks don't like it, they don't have to read it, otherwise, pluck out your offending eyeball.
    Keep up the good work, Bruce. I, for one, hope you don't change your approach to YOUR blog.

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  13. Thank you. I'm on my tablet so can't write much now. Tablets great for surfing and reading but not typing or blogging.

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