Follow me on my journey working in the country of Qatar! I am a Field Engineer employed by Schlumberger focusing on drilling and measurements (MWD). ***DISCLAIMER: THIS ACCOUNT IS IN NO WAY AN OFFICIAL ACCOUNT FOR SCHLUMBERGER LIMITED. THE IDEAS, THOUGHTS AND IMAGES ARE MY OWN AND NOT A REFLECTION OF SCHLUMBERGER. ***
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First Offshore Job!!
I went for my first job on March 6th and stayed offshore until May 8th when I got to go back to land for the casing break (after begging the company man to let me go to drink beer) then I returned to the rig for the last section May17-28th.Â
Hereâs what I documented while offshore:
Day 1:
Arrived to the heliport at 5:30am. It is just like an airport but much smaller and no carry-on liquids limit! Watched a pre-boarding safety video, put on lifejackets and earplugs then loaded the helicopter. This was my first helicopter ride! I was surprised how gently the helicopter took off and landed, much more gentle than any airplane Iâve ridden. The platform we are working on for the next undetermined amount of time is smaller than I thought but from what Iâve gathered from other people this is a normal size except the accommodation is very, very small. I think the maximum number of people on here is around 200. I cannot see any land or buildings in the distance. However, it is quite hazy today. The water is a very pretty blue color and the waves today are bigger than I expected! Everyone has told me I will start hating all the blue soon but I am optimistic because blue is my favorite color. J
I am sharing a room with 3 coworkers. I am the only female on this rig. We share a bathroom with 2 other guys, 6 total. Due to the high capacity, there are no extra rooms to give me a private one but I donât mind sharing so itâs a non-issue for me. Our room has bunk beds; Iâm in one of the top bunks. There are curtains that go around the entire bed so you do have your own private areaâŠkind of! The bed is comfortable except for the pillow, which is hard. There are constant PA announcements so it is not a little difficult to get a good nightâs rest. The water depth here is only 12 meters so the waves donât sway the rig, the drilling does. It feels like a small earthquake so I woke up twice confused because I wasnât in California, haha! The food is very good! The water in the shower only stays hot for 2 minutes at a time so quick showers only.
So far I have enjoyed my first day offshore. The rig is still in set-up mode so we are looking at a possibility of not having anything to do for the next 3-7 days. Iâm loving every second out here watching this operation!
 Day 2:
We still have no internet. There is not much more we can do until we are granted access to the rig internet. After dinner, I got to go up to the rig floor and stand in the dog house (drillerâs cabin) to watch them make up the Bottom Hole Assembly (BHA). We are starting a new well so the first section will be the conductor pipe; water table protector, largest hole size. The tools used to drill the conductor are huge. Iâve seen big bits before but never a hole opener! **Note to self: find picture of 36â hole opener to post** We should begin drilling tomorrow if all goes according to plan!
 Day 3:
Still no internetâthe struggle is real. We are able to call the base to talk to the Drilling Engineer and our Field Service Manager (FSM). Again, not much to do today. I learned a lot about running electrical cables and the sequence of the wires when using the crimping tool to change/add a head. We were supposed to start drilling today but it looks like we wonât start until early tomorrow morning. I am still enjoying myself. The SLB team that is with me is one other MWD Engineer and two Direction Drillers (DD). The DDâs are the age of my dad and the other MWD is 9 years older than me. All of them are very smart and funny. Â Hopefully, tomorrow we get internet so I can do some studying on the tools we are going to be running.
 Day 5:
The mudloggers wouldnât let us share their internet cable that runs from their unit, which is right next to ours, to the company manâs office in the accommodation and to the geologistâs office next to the accommodation. So, we had to run our own cable which required opening ceilings, drilling holes through walls and lots of zipties. It was a long process but, luckily, we have extra down time because there were some issues spudding the well. SLB wonât be running any of their MWD and directional tools until the 3rd section which was supposed to begin on the 10th of March but will likely happen around the 12th or 13th.
I donât think Iâve mentioned how awesome the laundry service on offshore rigs are. You just put your dirty clothes outside your room and 3 hours later theyâre back nice and clean. I think I would prefer staying offshore 24/7 if we got internet access. Iâm still loving the ocean view!
 Day 6:
I slept so good last night! Best sleep since being here. At breakfast, I convinced the kitchen staff to let me have some of the company manâs strawberriesâŠearly win for the day! They are running conductor pipe today so nothing to do for us. Still no internet access, which is real annoying. The mudloggers got their internet access yesterday. l wonât be able to access the internet from the accommodation, but I can in our unit. I didnât properly prepare for coming offshore. I learned I should have brought less clothes and downloaded a lot more books, I guess not that many lessons lol! I am very appreciative of my co-workers, we laugh a lot and talk a lot.
Iâve been doing a lot of studying during all this downtime. I will be going to school sometime in June and July. By then, I will be very prepared. Most people do this schooling with no field experience and I will have 5 months field experience. Because I donât have internet access, I only have the first two schoolâs information downloaded and I have gotten through that material so Iâve begun bugging our DDâs about their job. I got a lot of the DD school information from one so I can start looking through that.
 Day 7:
Still no internet. In the accommodation room, on the 1st floor, there is a small collection of books so I wonât die of boredom after I finish the last 10 pages in the book Iâm currently reading. Iâve also been collecting movies and TV shows from various people around the rig. I should have brought my big hard driverâanother lesson learned.
This week has gone by fast. It is easy to lose track of the days. Iâm excited to get to the section of the well where we start running our toolsâit will be another big learning curve I am excited to learn but nervous about remembering everything in such a short time period. I will get to shadow during the 26ââ section and then be on my own for the rest of the well. Still not sure if they will keep me out here until Total Depth (TD).
Day 8:
We finally got internet access!!! We requested for 11 mac addresses to be granted internet access but they only gave us 4. So, to compensate we set up one of the laptops as a hotspot and now have wifi in the unit. But no one knows and no one should find out. It was so exciting to finally get on the internet and let everyone know I am okay. I had emails from people I wasnât expecting and from people I wanted to contact to talk drilling stuff. The rig crew is installing to BOP so we arenât neglecting work to play on the internet.
I was able to download two more books even though I already started a new book that I got from the Rec room. Â Progress is happening! I think I will be out here from at least another 2-3 weeks.
Day 9:
We are finally drilling. Still not running our tool so I have more time to prepare for my job. The other MWD out here with me is leaving to go back to land and they are sending a new MWD on loan from Algeria. Iâll be switching to night shift tomorrow, hopefully things will be calmer during the night shift and I wonât have to talk to so many people (company man/manager/town). J
Day 13:
Time is flying by! I canât believe Iâve already been here for almost two full weeks! It feels like 5 days. Night shift is really relaxed, partly because we still havenât run our tool downhole and partly because most people are sleeping so no one is bugging us for data. I miss the sun because I liked looking at the ocean and watching the waves. Today we had TWO drills. Went to bed at 7am, woke up for the first drill at 10am, went back to sleep for maybe 5 minutes and the second drill started. Thankfully, I was able to go back to sleep. I had worked a double the day/night before so sleep exhaustion helped to get back to sleep quickly!
The night DD is fun. He plays music and dances! Heâs become like my second dadâvery protective. He says he doesnât like the other guys here asking about me and talking to me so whenever the driller calls for a survey print out I send Yuri up to deliver it. But if the company calls, Iâm the one thatâs sent. Iâve been put on a mission to figure out how the guys in the surface room are able to get on facebook when itâs blocked for the rest of us. My coworkers tell me I need to use my âwoman powerâ. I just laugh. Disclaimer, no one has been rude to me, just Uncle Yuri looking out!
Iâve been assigned a mentor just 2 days ago. Turns out to be a Texas A&M alumn! I thought I escaped all the Aggies because Iâm working in Qatar and not Texas! Heâs been extremely helpful, kind and very intelligent. Iâm very appreciative for all of his help and for all that he is teaching me! I need to figure out a way to thank him BIG for all he has done for me!
 Day 19:
We have been on standby for 6 days now because of a bad cement job. Iâve been gathering 3-6 movies from people around the rig every day so my collection is getting pretty good. In the mornings Iâve been going up to the helideck to walk/run (running gets boring pretty quick without music and running in small circles). I especially enjoy watching the sun rise, itâs so beautiful over the water. Yesterday it was a really, pretty pink sunrise! I saw a big, brown sea turtle, first sea creature Iâve seen since coming here!
My normal schedule has become:
16:30-roll out of bed, throw on my coveralls, put on socks and crocs, brush teeth, head downstairs to the galley for dinner
17:30-walk into the unit, get the update for current operations and what happened during the day, joke around, get the latest rig gossip (yes boys gossip a lot!)
18:00-start shift
00:00-go to the galley (if operation permits) for some soup
5:00-6:00-go have breakfast
6:30-go to helideck (weather permitting) and walk/run
7:30-go take a shower
8:00-read until I fall asleep
REPEAT
Day 21:
The new joke in our unit has become âare you speaking English?â any time anyone has to ask âwhatâ. It started because the other MWD from Algeria and the day DD from India have a really hard time understanding my English because of âmy accentâ. I also have a hard time understanding their English but weâre making it work. Iâve been learning some Hindi, French, Arabic, and Indonesian. Just a few words, mostly naughty words.
 Day 23:
Today and yesterday have been long! We got H2S (hydrogen sulfide gas) at surface so weâve had to muster for 5 hours total yesterday and so far 3 hours today. H2S is a toxic gas, smells bad at low concentrations but canât be detected by smell at medium-high concentrations which makes it very dangerous. Our unit is located right above the shakers where H2S is usually located. Because I am working night shift, my sleep has been majorly disturbed. After waking us up throughout the day to stand at our muster stations with SCBAs on, when day shift went to bed they decided against having everyone muster and just have those working night shift to muster. So, us working night shift are getting screwed out of sleep. Iâm ready to get this section over with!
  Day 30:
We are experiencing problems with the well. We almost got to go home because it was going to take longer than a few days to remedy the issue but town called with a new plan that requires us to stay. I was looking forward to going back to land but I was also kind of bummed because I wanted to work with a Rotary Steerable System (RSS) that we are running in the next section. Right now it looks like I will be staying, you never know though, decisions are always made last minute!
The night DD working with me found some real coffee, not the instant nescafe crap! We donât have a proper coffee machine nor do we have filters but in Indonesia they donât make coffee the way we do in America. You scoop the ground coffee into your cup, add boiling water, stir, let it sit for ~5 minutes for all of the grounds to settle to the bottom and enjoy! It was a little weird at first but itâs totally worth having good coffee.
FINALLY BACK TO LAND!
As soon as I arrived on land, I dropped my bags off at the hotel, changed into normal clothes and met the Oil Installation Manager (OIM), rig superintendent and the mud engineer at a hotel bar to celebrate finishing the section. How good beer tastes after so long! After spend a couple of days in base testing tools and a few days sitting by the pool, I returned to the rig to finish drilling the well.
It was fun returning to people I knew. Drilling only took us about a week, the geologist called early TD because we hit water (not what you want when drilling for oil). One of the tools we ran in this run is brand new, only three in the world and two were on board with me. I was very nervous going into this run because I hadnât run the older generation of this tool, never ran a LWD tool so I had to do a lot of studying and research to gain knowledge about the tool to be prepared for any issues during drilling. PLUS it was even more important for this run to go well because the tool is in the field test stage. Inshallah, all went really well and only took ONE run to finish! This was SO unlike the previous section where it took 9 runs to finish. It was such a happy feeling when TD was called. After all of the problems experienced throughout this well, I didnât think we would actually finish it.
 My first hitch offshore was great. Challenging yet rewarding. It was an experience I wonât soon forget! Now itâs time to prepare for school in RUSSIA!
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Lol so clearly keeping up with a blog isnât my thingÂ
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This is first for me!!! When I first got to the hotel I had a weekâs worth of dirty laundry and no clue what to do except give it to the hotel laundry service. It only cost $25 US but I realized thatâs not something I should do every weekâyo gurl is trying to save as much money as possible! I noticed a retractable cord in the shower at the Middle East Learning Center (MLC) and, at the time, had no idea what it was for. Then I saw the same device in my shower here at the hotel and when I couldnât find a dryer anywhere in the apartment I put all the pieces together. So, cheers to my first load of laundry in a different country!
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SHOUT OUT TO TRAVIS ZITO FOR MY PICTURES!!! I finally found some tape at a store (3 stores later--guess it isn't a common item here). I wish I had more pictures to put up on these blank walls! Next project: find somewhere that prints pictures.
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It is definitely very obvious where the new construction ends. These are some of the roads that lead to base. Feels like a different world. It's about an hour bus ride from the hotel to base. There is always traffic and I stress the entire time we are going to get in an accident. This isn't just in Qatar. It seems to be a trend everywhere in the middle east-crazy driving. Next bus ride I will count the number of honks I hear and the number my bus driver honks.
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It is definitely very obvious where the new construction ends. These are some of the roads that lead to base. Feels like a different world. It's about an hour bus ride from the hotel to base. There is always traffic and I stress the entire time we are going to get in an accident. This isn't just in Qatar. It seems to be a trend everywhere in the middle east-crazy driving. Next bus ride I will count the number of honks I hear and the number my bus driver honks.
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Here is my hotel and permanent accommodation while I am working in Qatar. I have a private bedroom and bathroom, like a typical hotel room, and share the kitchen and living room with 3 others (all SLB employees). The last picture is the view from my room! The picture doesn't show how pretty it actually is. The hotel has a small grocery store on the 4th floor so maybe when I get a better idea of my schedule I can cook in the kitchen. I've meet 2 of the other people in my hall. One is a FET (Field Engineer Trainee) in D&M (drilling and measurements) from Saudi and the other is coiling tubing from Venezuela. I've talked to another FET in D&M from Malaysia that I believe is the last roomie. All are very nice and helpful! The bed is a harder than I'm used to but isn't giving me any neck or back issues so no complaints! Actually, one complaint, the only English channel I get is CNN :l
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Tonight I had to walk to the mall to get some ID pictures taken and a SIM card so I can call people here! The pictures really don't do the city any justice. It is beautiful here at night! These pictures are crap! I experienced my first Anti-American rudeness tonight, not sure what else to call it. When I was getting a SIM card, the man helping me was helpful until I had to show him my passport and he realized I am American. Almost immediately he refused to speak English, wouldn't install the SIM card for me, and refused to explain the various packages they offer. It was quite frustrating. I still haven't been able to put the new SIM card in. The next day when I had to go do my medical testing for residency a very similar situation happened: no problem until I had to show my passport then refusal to talk to me. I'm assuming this is due to President Trump's travel bans (which I don't agree with). I was still able to accomplish everything I needed, except installing my SIM card. Everyone I have met in the company so far have been nice. There is a big age gap between me and pretty much everyone at base, around 10+ years. I've only heard of one other American. I've met people from Thailand, Scotland, Pakistan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Libya, China, Venezuela and India. It's relieving to know I'm not the only one struggling with Arabic--it's a damn hard language to learn.
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My plane ticket only allowed for 2 checked bags but I had 3. There is a baggage wrapping station around the corner from the check-in counter. I have never seen anything like this before but I'm glad they have it because it saved me 500 dirhams (about $136). The Abu Dhabi Airport has a mini mall with lots of shopping in the center of all of the gates. I have never seen this before. I definitely came to the airport much too early but oh well!
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PSA borders is still alive and well over here!
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Today I am off to Doha, Qatar. I will head to base on Sunday to sort out my work visa and hopefully get more information about my work. The work weeks here are Sunday-Thursday.
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Last full day at MLC! :( 2 members of our group have to leave tonight because they have a 1am flight back to Egypt. We are all definitely very sad. This week went by too fast. I know I will most likely see everyone at some point in the future but it is probably impossible for all of us to get together at the same time ever again. Not everyone is flying back to their home countries. Almost half will stay here and continue onto school for the next 6 weeks. I found out today the next school for me is in March and if I get into that then I will get to see most of my people again! We went back into Abu Dhabi city. First stop was the mall. Harrison played piano for us and is very, very talented. Gifts were purchased to take back to their families. I did not purchase anything because I still have months on this side of the world. I feel like I packed very lightly but I wish I didn't bring so much too. I also got a new backpack and duffel bag from SLB. The struggle of international travel. Anyway, then we went to some nearby hotel and had a big beer there. We sat around and talked to each other for over an hour. We had everyone sing a song in their native language and then translate to English. The translations were so beautiful. I was very impressed. Afterwards, we walked 20 minutes to get real schwarma. It was delicious! The goodbyes and see you laters have begun :(
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Today was the longest day 8:30-6! I am feeling much better now that I slept extra long last night. We tried on our coveralls and walked through the workshops. I cannot wait to come back to school and work in the workshops. So many cool tools and technologies! Orientation is coming to an end and we are all sad. Tonight we decided to stay at MLC and hang out. I think we could all talk to each other forever. We are constantly laughing. We make fun of each other trying to correctly pronounce arabic, Spanish, Russian and English! I have learned SO much from these people. It is crazy. We also got to do some modeling for SLB so be on the lookout for me walking and talking through the workshops!
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