hi I am just getting interested and doing prelim research on Minerals - I tried clicking the mineral management spreadsheet link and it no longer works. Is there a chance you would be comfrotable to repost it or send it my way? If not and it's proprietary I completely I understand, but if you can I truly appreciate it !!!
Hi Blue Mesa Minerals, thanks for this, great information. I have land in Texas and I'm checking the RRC GIS, but I don't see anything to click on at my site. Does this mean there are no leases whatsoever? Is there another way to check to make sure I'm not missing out on royalties?
We had heard for 60 years that our great grandfather secured Mineral rights in Texas with the intention of providing for his children. We never thought it was true but recently I received a Fed Ex package with a an offer to buy these "mineral rights" for a very small sum. Do you have any advice on how I might investigate these rights to determine if there is true value in them ?
The best thing to do is hire a landman to research it for you. That way, you know what you own, the true value, and if the "buyer" knows something you don't (such as having royalties in suspense that they don't want you to know about).
Attorneys like to charge you for someone else's work. thats all they do is pass on infirmation, then send you an invoice. I've bought and leased minerals for a couple decades without the help of an attorney. There are boundaries, a person just sticks to them. If you're selling, I may be interested, check with Angus Oil LLC in Roswell, NM. No one knows it all.
hi I am just getting interested and doing prelim research on Minerals - I tried clicking the mineral management spreadsheet link and it no longer works. Is there a chance you would be comfrotable to repost it or send it my way? If not and it's proprietary I completely I understand, but if you can I truly appreciate it !!!
Pumping nat gas since 1920, 100 years. Like to pump the crude oil.
That's great. Not all mineral owners get revenue checks for 100 years! A lot of today's shale wells won't produce for more than 10-20 years.
Oh yes, we are still going strong at 100 years...life is great👊
@@SyzygyStardust What state and county are your minerals located in? I'm always curious to see what areas are producing for so long.
Eastern KY. Onedia.
Hi Blue Mesa Minerals, thanks for this, great information. I have land in Texas and I'm checking the RRC GIS, but I don't see anything to click on at my site. Does this mean there are no leases whatsoever? Is there another way to check to make sure I'm not missing out on royalties?
The RRC is the best source for Texas. Are you using the map to locate your legal description?
We had heard for 60 years that our great grandfather secured Mineral rights in Texas with the intention of providing for his children. We never thought it was true but recently I received a Fed Ex package with a an offer to buy these "mineral rights" for a very small sum. Do you have any advice on how I might investigate these rights to determine if there is true value in them ?
The best thing to do is hire a landman to research it for you. That way, you know what you own, the true value, and if the "buyer" knows something you don't (such as having royalties in suspense that they don't want you to know about).
Thank you so much. That is exactly what I needed to know ! @@BlueMesaMinerals
I need a lawyer to negotiate a deal
You can google the state where the minerals are plus "oil and gas attorney" and it should come up with a list of options for you.
Attorneys like to charge you for someone else's work. thats all they do is pass on infirmation, then send you an invoice. I've bought and leased minerals for a couple decades without the help of an attorney. There are boundaries, a person just sticks to them. If you're selling, I may be interested, check with Angus Oil LLC in Roswell, NM. No one knows it all.