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Drive In To Dine

In 1925, the area around Broadway Avenue in Oklahoma City was flourishing with automobile businesses located in quaint, brick buildings with large, open show rooms. The Packard Building became a fixture of this area known as Automobile Alley, but as downtown entered a steep decline in the following decades, it was just another vacant structure in an abandoned district.

With the renaissance of Midtown and Automobile Alley, the Packard Building is once again purring with new life, as Oklahoma City diners flock to one of the area’s most recent culinary additions: Packard’s New American Kitchen.

General manager John Ross appreciates the history of the location of his new dining endeavor. After all, he has a culinary history of his own. Born into a family of restaurateurs and chefs, food has been a passion of his since childhood. According to Ross, watching the space take shape was remarkable.

“Midtown Renaissance has done a wonderful job renovating the Packard Building,” he says. “The building has actually been unoccupied longer than it has been occupied since it was built and was apparently quite a mess when renovations began. When we got into the space it was a shell with windows, drywall interior walls, and chipped linoleum tile. We were pleasantly surprised to uncover the original black, white and red marble mosaic floor, which was hand-laid in 1925 as the Packard automobile showroom floor…there are still imperfections, but we like that it gives the space a sense of history and character.”

Just as important as the ambience at Packard’s is the food, of course. Ross says the restaurant aims to marry Oklahoma City’s new trend in fine dining with its working class roots.

“‘New American Kitchen’ describes Packard’s in that it is offering a fresh and updated look at food that has become great American fare,” Ross says. “It is food that is exceptional and yet comfortable, aims for perfection without pretentiousness, and depending on little more than the time of day, one can dine wearing jean shorts or a black tie.”

Among the difficult choices facing diners are such offerings as pan-seared grouper, pasta carbonara and the most popular offering so far, the pesto pork chop. Not to be overlooked is the restaurant’s impressive cocktails menu, including the Pack Mule – the restaurant’s personal take on a Moscow mule – and the Panhandler: a bourbon cocktail boasting COOP Gran Sport Porter, maple, lemon and torched rosemary.

The cocktails aren’t the only offerings with plenty of local flavor. Packard’s sources as many ingredients locally as possible, from dairy and coffee to produce and protein.

Ross is proud that Packard’s is the newest member of Midtown’s revitalization. “The shared sense of positive change in the area is palpable,” he says. “Everyone knows that they are part of something bigger happening in OKC. It is exciting to be a part of it, and I can’t wait to see the process of change unfold.” 201 NW 10th St., Oklahoma City. www.packardsokc.com

The Roughneck Effect

Hardcore Tulsa soccer fans pine for the glory days of the Tulsa Roughnecks. The team, imported from Hawaii, regularly ended its seasons with playoff berths in the North American Soccer League’s Soccer Bowl. The team had talent, including Charlie Mitchell, Iraj Danaeifard and Victor Moreland. It also had fans. Lots of fans. At its peak of popularity, 20,000 fans filled the stands for games at The University of Tulsa’s Skelly Stadium. The Roughnecks rarely failed, but the North American Soccer League did in 1984, ending professional soccer in America until Major League Soccer debuted in 1993.

Soccer in Tulsa didn’t disappear during those lean nine years. If anything, the soccer scene exploded. Tulsa is home to the Athletics, one of the top five of nearly 50 semi-pro teams in the National Premier Soccer League. It’s about to be joined by a new indoor team, the Tulsa Revolution. Tulsans take their soccer very seriously. Soccer is so prevalent in Tulsa that it’s become a self-sustaining engine of sorts.

“We started something with the Roughnecks. Soccer’s grown tremendously in Tulsa over the last 25 years,” says ex-Roughneck Charlie Mitchell. “We now have a young bunch of elite athletes here that have reached the highest levels of competitive programs. The University of Tulsa, a Division I program, among the top five in the country, is here. We’ve got coaches that worked with some of the most competitive teams in the country. They have high standards and a love of the game that they’re passing along to Tulsa’s younger players.”

In the 1980s, the NASL represented the best of the best soccer, not just in the U.S., but around the world. The great Pelé played for the New York Cosmos. A handful of Roughnecks came over from the United Kingdom. The Roughnecks were right up there at the top of the league, competing twice for the NASL championship and bringing it home to Tulsa in 1983. The team was rewarded with a ticker tape parade, and its success left an indelible mark on the community. They were winners. They were exciting. They attracted both dedicated and casual fans. Soccer became the sport to watch in Tulsa.

May The Better Team Win

Roughnecks fans – kids during the 1980s – still tell stories about practicing with the team. On Mondays, the entire team assembled at various restaurants, inviting fans to lunch with them. Many fans were on a first-name basis with the Roughnecks. In 1983, as the NASL began rapidly folding, and the Roughnecks had trouble staying alive financially. With the loss of crowds in other cities with failed teams, the Roughnecks weren’t even pulling in enough money to make payroll. A local telethon rallied fans and raised enough to keep the team alive.

The Roughnecks started the first soccer camps in Oklahoma. There was no shortage of attendees. Tulsa kids with a love of soccer also had a love of the Roughnecks. Getting lessons from this band of British footballers was, for the kids, like learning from living legends. Members of the team still kick around in the Tulsa soccer scene, coaching youth teams and teaching at soccer camps. Some, now more than 60 years old, still play. And they still win.

Mitchell and Victor Moreland were inducted into the Soccer Hall of Fame in 2012. Mitchell also passed his soccer skills to players at Northeastern State University, where he coached for nine years. He currently serves as executive director of the Highlanders Football Club, a Bixby team he started in 1997. Mitchell, like other Roughnecks, can’t put the cleats away.

Tulsa’s soccer crowd won’t forget the Roughnecks anytime soon. The 30th anniversary of their NASL championship win against the Toronto Blizzard before a crowd of 60,051 will be celebrated in October. The location, of course, will be TU’s H.A. Chapman Stadium, which to diehard Roughnecks fans will always be known as Skelly Stadium.

The Roughnecks were a blue-collar team that had one of the lowest payrolls in the league. As one fan says, it wasn’t about the money for these players. They loved soccer, and when they took the field, they rolled up their sleeves and got the job done. That attitude was right for Tulsa, a town built on rolled-up sleeves and jobs well done. The team was fearless, and that fit Tulsa, too. Just as Tulsa boosters were (and are) comfortable going toe-to-toe with larger cities, the Roughnecks never shied from taking on teams from those larger cities. They welcomed teams like the New York Cosmos to town. They wanted the challenges.

“That spirit is still here,” says Sonny Dalesandro, owner of the Tulsa Athletics. “Our youth teams don’t fear anybody. Their attitude is, ‘If you beat us, it’s because you’re a better team and you outworked us.’ Tulsa teams are fearless when they take the field. They take the same attitude the Roughnecks held when playing teams from bigger cities. They roll up their sleeves and get to work, too.”

Same City, New Teams

Even today, Roughnecks memorabilia enjoys healthy sales on eBay. A vintage 1976 Roughnecks jersey will cost you $100. There’s a market for everything Roughnecks, from pennants to programs and tickets to posters.

Dalesandro didn’t want to let soccer go when the Tulsa Roughnecks folded. With friends, he founded a men’s league team, the Boston Avenue Athletic Club, in 2005. It was casual, with a lot of Sunday matches, but a lot of hanging out, too. That club developed a second team, fondly called “the reserves,” that consisted primarily of players from TU, Oral Roberts University and a couple of professional teams.

The Athletic Club won a lot, becoming one of the best teams in the state. And that club was the seed for the Tulsa Athletics. It was also the beginning of a popular team strategy in Tulsa: Find the fuel for your engine in your own backyard. The Athletics recently joined the National Premier Soccer League. It’s a highly competitive league, but it’s also not a professional league, allowing players – especially college players – to retain their amateur status. With NCAA Division I soccer teams like TU and ORU down the street, good players aren’t hard to find in the college off-season.
“We absolutely ask TU and ORU players to join the fray. Tulsa has an incredibly deep player pool in terms of talent. We want the Athletics to be a representation of our finest local players,” says Dalesandro.

The Athletics themselves are a huge part of Tulsa’s soccer engine. They have fans. Attendance at games averages 3,500 avid spectators. The Athletics performed remarkably this year, losing only one game. It’s expected to dominate the division in 2014. The fan base will grow, and strong fan bases get teams promoted to higher level leagues. But Dalesandro also tips his hat to the Roughnecks when he talks about his team’s fan base.

“Without the Tulsa Roughnecks and the clubs they started and founded, Tulsa would just be another football town in America. We want the Athletics to have their own identity, while drawing on the past successes and influence of the Tulsa Roughnecks,” he says. “We really want the Athletics to embody the past, present and future of soccer in Tulsa.”

That future will be played out in the old, unused Drillers Stadium. The team will pay for renovations, updates and utilities. Dalesandro also plans on adding a beer garden and two playgrounds for kids.

After one season in the NPSL, the Athletics are the 30th largest in average game attendance. That number includes all competitive soccer teams in the U.S. and Canada – including the MLS; at present, there are 19 teams in the MLS. That the Athletics could, in its second and third seasons in the NPSL, move ahead of some MLS teams for game attendance is a real possibility.

Local entrepreneurs Adam Mellor and Shannon Clark are bringing a whole new angle to Tulsa soccer. Earlier this year they announced the arrival of the Tulsa Revolution, the city’s first professional arena league soccer team. Again, the Revolution is using the time-honored technique of finding solid players in its own backyard. The team recently held public tryouts, inviting locals to take a shot at pro soccer.

The Revolution will be aggressive this season. In addition to locals, they’re hunting talent in the Professional Arena Soccer League for its highest caliber players. The short-term goal is nothing less that making an appearance in the playoffs this year. The long-term plan is building an organization with high-end performances that will attract fans and keep them coming back.

“Americans easily fall in love with arena soccer. It has all the aesthetics and technique of the outdoor game,” says Revolution Head Coach Michael Nsein. “However, it’s played at 100 miles per hour with lots of scoring. The problem most Americans have with outdoor soccer is that an entire game can be played without a single goal scored. Indoor soccer averages eight to nine goals per game. It’s end-to-end excitement and entertainment, keeping even the most casual soccer fan on the edge of their seat.”

Start Early, Play Often

The University of Tulsa is a big star for Tulsa’s soccer world to orbit. The men’s team ended the 2012 season with a 14-6-1 record, earning the Golden Hurricane a berth in the Sweet 16 and garnering the team the overall number 14 spot in men’s NCAA Division I soccer. The women’s team closed the season with a 12-6-4 record, putting it close to a berth in the playoffs.

TU head coach for women’s soccer, Kyle Cussen, estimates that half of his team comes from Oklahoma, with most of those from Tulsa. Cussen goes to the Oklahoma well for players, but over time, he puts back as much as he takes. TU offers summer soccer camps for kids of all ages, pulling in 500 or more kids in one session. Day camps are held at local elementary schools. The Golden Hurricane, on both the men’s and women’s sides of the game, reaches out to youth leagues around the city. And they should. Those kids are their future players.

“When I started coaching, I was determined that if I became a head coach, I’d recruit Oklahomans first because there’s a lot of talent here,” says Cussen. “The talent’s been here, but the kids are getting noticed now because youth leagues are more competitive and traveling a lot more. Our teams travel all over the nation to play the best teams in the country.”

Tulsa Soccer Club Hurricane is exactly the kind of institution Cussen’s thinking about. If you’re growing pro players, you better give them the high-end training grounds they need. TSC Hurricane Executive Director, Jim Tindell, has spent years building up his facility in Jenks. His complex is where the best of the best Oklahoma soccer players are made.

TSC definitely gets them while they’re young. One of its programs includes kindergartners. There’s no shortage of teams to play on. TSC supports 90 of them.

“We have programs for all ages and playing levels, the largest coaching network, the most nationally licensed coaches, the only club affiliated with a MLS franchise, the only club in the Elite Clubs National League – the highest level girls’ national league – and the biggest youth tournaments, and the only major college showcase,” he says proudly.

Soccer’s The Future

A lot of smart people think there’s a Major League Soccer team in Tulsa’s future. Cussen believes that if crowds continue to support the Athletics and the Golden Hurricane, it makes Tulsa a good candidate. Dalesandro’s more adamant.

“First, soccer’s worked here before. The MLS knows that. The Roughnecks were one of the top averaging clubs in the NASL. The MLS sees Tulsa as a potential market for a team,” he says. “After that, it’s about Tulsans recognizing one extremely important thing: This is our only shot at having a major sports team in our city. This understanding has to lead to a unified effort to show our city’s leaders and local businesses that this is what we want here. Our hopes are that the community sees this situation the same and reacts accordingly to bring something very special to a very deserving city.”

Obtaining a MLS team will be the latest expression of the Oklahoma City-Tulsa rivalry. Prodigal, an advisory group with a specialty in professional sports, announced plans in mid-July to build a stadium large enough to hold a USL Pro soccer team. The as-yet-unnamed franchise will debut for the 2014 season – in an as-yet-unnamed stadium. The USL Pro league is, for want of a better description, a farm team for the MLS.

“It’s not easy to get a MLS franchise. You’ve got to have the fan support, the corporate support, and the resources to pay the franchise fees,” says Prodigal’s Executive Vice President of New Business Development, John Allgood. “It takes a lot. We don’t feel like Oklahoma City is ready for a MLS franchise right now, but it will be in seven to 10 years, and hosting a USL Pro team is a perfect way to earn our stripes.”

Regardless of which city gets the franchise, Tulsa will always be a soccer town. The city is a soccer engine that fuels itself, a perpetual motion machine that trains, nurtures and produces players that find spots in the highest echelons of semi-professional and professional soccer. Tulsa is where goals are scored.

When A Dish Is Something More

To Joniece Frank, Frankoma pottery dishes are so much more than functional pieces.

“It’s the design,” she says. “It gives beauty to an object. You don’t need beauty, but it makes life a more perfect place to enjoy.”

John Frank, Joniece Frank’s father, was the originator of Frankoma pottery. She says that her father was an artist first, and that it why the beautiful pottery remains so popular.

John Frank began the ceramics department at OU, scouring for scraps to build studio equipment in dumpsters and alleys since he did not have a budget, Frank describes.

“Then, after studying a geological survey, he got to looking for clay to use. He found the beautiful red clay of Ada,” she says. “He started making pots with it and started the Frankoma company the next year.”

The family moved to Sapulpa in 1938 so that John Frank could focus on the company full-time. Throughout the years, and until Frank’s death in 1973, the studio suffered from multiple fires but was able to rebuild and get back on its feet each time.

“It is art, and it is loved by people. That’s why Frankoma is still alive. It’s been utterly destroyed twice, but it keeps coming back,” Frank says.

Since Frank and her sister, Donna, have retired, ownership of the company has changed several times, but Frank says that collectors will always seek the pottery.
Randy and Marianne McFarlin of Ada are just two of these collectors.

“I was exposed to Frankoma very early on,” Randy McFarlin says. “Growing up, we ate on Frankoma dishes, and when my family moved to Tulsa in 1960, my parents took us to the factory on Route 66.”

As he got older, he and his wife began to appreciate Frankoma in a new way.

“For us, it was the Ada connection. The clay was dug right here – right around the corner from our house,” McFarlin says.

McFarlin later served as president of the Frankoma Family Collectors Association, a close-knit group that first met in 1994. Held at First United Bank in Sapulpa, the reunion is part collectors gathering and part pottery sale.

“People love to talk to the Frank sisters and all those who have been a part of Frankoma over the years,” McFarlin says. “It keeps the interest and tradition alive.”

The show, open to the public, will be held Sept. 28 this year.

“This work talks to you,” Frank says. “It’s like how God designed man – with beauty and love. And I don’t believe that any one company has better represented the state of Oklahoma.”

Ancient Cherokee Angel

Courtesy.
Becky Hobbs. Courtesy.

In her decades-spanning career as a country music performer, songwriter and recording artist, Bartlesville native Becky Hobbs has made her presence felt with such honky-tonk barnburners as “Hottest ‘Ex’ In Texas” and “Jones on the Jukebox,” while also writing and co-writing a variety of hits for other acts. One of the most notable songs in the latter category is “Angels Among Us,” which the band Alabama took to the upper reaches of the national country-music charts in 1994.

By the time that single came out, Hobbs had begun musically exploring a personal connection with an ancient angel named Nanyehi, whose English name was Nancy Ward. A noted Cherokee woman of the Revolutionary War era, she also happened to be Hobbs’ great-great-great-great-great grandmother.

“I wrote a handful of songs about her in the early ‘90s,” Hobbs recalls. “I’d known about her ever since I was a little girl, because the history was handed down to several generations before my mother, and I think really as soon as I started writing songs and playing music, I felt that one day I would pay tribute to Nancy Ward.

“I always thought it would be in the form of an album, though,” she adds. “I had no idea I would ever embark on writing a musical.”

She did, though, and the results were most recently seen on the stage of Northeastern State University’s Center for the Performing Arts in Tahlequah.

“Our very first workshop for Nanyehi was three years ago at NSU,” says Hobbs. “The heartbeat of the Cherokee Nation is in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, and our chief, Bill John Baker, is a fellow Nancy Ward descendant. So I called the Chief, and he put the wheels in motion. It wouldn’t be happening without him putting the Cherokee Nation and NSU together to co-sponsor this venture.”

It also probably wouldn’t happen if not for a meeting between Hobbs and veteran stage director Nick Sweet, who worked with her during Bartlesville’s celebration of the Oklahoma Centennial back in 2007.

“I was asked to close the show and play some of my songs, so of course I did my honky-tonk songs, and ‘Angels Among Us,’” she says. “But I also did a couple of songs that were inspired by Nancy Ward, ‘Let There be Peace’ and ‘Pale Moon,’ and I spoke briefly about her.
“Nick Sweet was the director of the whole show, he’d put it together, and he came up to me afterwards and said, ‘I know who Nancy Ward is. I directed [the outdoor drama] The Trail of Tears one year.’ And at that moment, we said, ‘Wouldn’t it be wonderful to write a musical about her one day?’”

Hobbs was just embarking on a European tour, and Sweet had a full slate of productions to direct, so it took a year before they finally started on what would become Nanyehi – Beloved Woman of the Cherokee. And it was then that Hobbs began feeling encouragement from forces that could be described as angelic.

“I had that handful of songs I’d written in the early ‘90s, and I wrote the remainder of the songs [for the musical], except for two, in a few months,” she recalls. “I was just plugged in. It was one of those situations where, before I went to sleep, I would think of the song, and I’d wake up having dreamt most of it. It’s really been my favorite time of the whole process; I felt very connected and very guided.

“There are 17 songs in the musical, and I feel that they’re the best writing I’ve ever done,” she adds. “It’s all been inspired by the creator; my job is just to keep my little ego out of the way. I like what I heard Paul Simon say on a TV show: The songs are already there. They’re already written. You just have to tune in to them.”

Certainly, the story behind the songs – Nancy Ward’s remarkable life – was already written, telling of her bravery in the Battle of Taliwa in 1755, when she took up the rifle of her fallen husband and led the Cherokees to victory, as well as her peacemaking efforts among the white colonists and her own tribe in what is now eastern Tennessee.

“Her life story, from the get-go, is totally incredible, and very controversial as well,” notes Hobbs. “Some of the Cherokees today feel she was a traitor. And that makes her story even more interesting, because she wanted the Cherokees to survive, more than anything, but she felt the way to do it was to live in harmony with the whites, because there were more and more of them coming across the mountains every day.”

Nanyehi’s true-life story, in fact, proved to be so rich that it initially overpowered what Sweet and Hobbs were attempting to create.

“At first, Nick and I thought it would be more like a musical revue, and then we got into the history of it – and our first draft was just too weighted down with history,” she explains. “We wanted to make sure we had the historical part correct, but then we realized it was too much like a history lesson. You know: history lesson, song, history lesson, song. So we did several workshops and readings and really concentrated on developing her as a person, a real-life woman who walked this planet – a mother, dealing with all these situations.”

By 2011, she and Sweet were ready to take the musical, still in workshop form, to the Tulsa Performing Art Center Trust’s SummerStage Festival. The resulting newspaper publicity led to Nanyehi’s first non-workshop performance.

“A lady called me from out of the blue,” recalls Hobbs. “She’d recently found out that she was a descendant of Nancy Ward, and she said, ‘My granddaughter has a regional theater company in Hartwell, Georgia, and she’s interested in talking to you.’ So I called, and they wanted to take it on. We were thrilled.

“To give you an idea of how we have been so spiritually guided: I had no idea that the Cherokee called Hartwell, Georgia, ‘The center of the world.’ There’s a monument three miles from Hartwell that has a plaque telling how it was ceremonial ground where all these different roads came together, with a lot of trading activity and dancing.”

While most of the players in the Tahlequah production are local, the role of “Nanyehi” will be filled by New York-based actor Michelle Honaker, reprising her performance at Hartwell.

“About 18 people from Oklahoma came to see our Hartwell production, most of them descendants of Nancy Ward,” says Hobbs. “And they all said, ‘You have to have her play Nancy Ward again.’ She blew everyone away.”

According to Hobbs, Honaker’s appearance is being sponsored by Chelsea’s Gary White, one of the Oklahomans who traveled to Georgia to see the Nanyehi staging.

“He and his wife, Barbara, have been so supportive of this musical,” she says. “Otherwise we could not have afforded to bring her in. She’s a great singer. She’s a great actor. And she embodies the spirit of Nancy Ward.”

The play is directed and co-written by Sweet. Hobbs is music director, and the band includes her husband, guitarist Duane Sciacqua, who’s worked with the likes of Paul McCartney, Glenn Frey and Joe Walsh.

Renaissance & Revolution

Independence.

In Oklahoma, the word has particular relevance. In carving out the modern state from what was once a dry, arid, desolate part of the country, Oklahoma’s early settlers found themselves having to be self-reliant, cut off as they were from the bustling American development on the east and west coasts. Depression-era advancements that created many of today’s waterways were an improvement, certainly. But, by and large, early Oklahomans – white and Native American alike – found themselves needing self-reliance to survive, to thrive, to create from nothing the state that today is among the most economically viable in the nation.

Along the way the economy, powered by local entrepreneurs and labor that drove the development of the state, was led by aviation, oil and gas and agriculture – with each having a turn in the top spot.

Today, though, there is no real competition with the energy sector as the state’s leading industry. And in light of new technologies and tremendous advancements in old technologies, Oklahoma’s energy sector is positioned to play a vital role in a new type of independence – a style of independence that each and every president of the United States for years has claimed to aspire to: North American energy independence.

Talking About A Revolution

As recently as 10 years ago, the idea of energy independence was mocked, considered a fool’s dream or else reliant on energy sources that were then under attack as openly as petroleum products are today – primarily nuclear power, which today has been all but stopped from expanding because of federal regulation. The nation’s supply of oil and natural gas had simply been depleted so much that only a few decades’ supply remained available to extract.

Those prognosticators, as is often the case, simply couldn’t account for new technologies suddenly opening up access to resources so expansive that today, experts in the field say there is no reason that North America couldn’t be energy independent until new sources of power are developed over the next century.

In the center of this new reality is Oklahoma, a state where some still remember what independence is all about.

“Oklahoma has always been one of the top producers of crude oil and natural gas – I believe we’re fourth or fifth in oil and third or fourth in natural gas, and certainly in the top five in both categories,” says Mike Terry, president of the Oklahoma Independent Petroleum Association (OIPA). Founded in 1955, OIPA represents more than 2,500 individuals and companies from Oklahoma’s oil and natural gas industry.

“If you look at the opportunities in Oklahoma, one of the great things you’re seeing is a lot of old fields that can produce now because of new technologies,” Terry says. “It isn’t just a couple of new fields – it’s the ability to go into huge old fields where it was thought extraction was impossible or cost-prohibitive. That’s a huge advantage. Because of new and the improvement of older technologies, we’ve been able to hit the reset button. It has really rejuvenated production in the state and also the economy.”

It isn’t particularly arcane technology that today can provide access to subterranean petroleum resources long believed out of reach.

“When you drilled in the past, you would drill in a geological feature that would possibly trap crude oil and natural gas,” says Pete Brown, chairman of OERB’s public education committee. “You were at the mercy of nature. Wildcatting is usually successful in one in 10 sites; that is one of 10 places you drill will become commercially viable.”

In 1993, leaders representing Oklahoma’s oil producers and royalty owners, worked with the State Legislature to form OERB – the Oklahoma Energy Resources Board. Oklahoma’s natural gas producers joined soon after. Its mission: “To use the strength of Oklahoma’s greatest industry to improve the lives of all Oklahomans through education and restoration.” A good portion of its efforts is directed at cleaning up former drill sites, with the remainder of the organization’s resources devoted to educating Oklahomans about the reality of the industry and its impact on the state.
Brown says that the wildcatting formula was forever changed around 2004. At that time, Oklahoma City-based Devon Energy had purchased Mitchell Energy, a smaller holding in Texas that had been experimenting with advanced drilling techniques in the Barnett Shale for decades. By 2004 Devon had improved on these techniques with help from Tulsa-based Helmerich & Payne, and, for the first time, extraction from so-called “tight shale” formations was financially viable.

“Once it was established in 2004 that you could pull [resources] out of shale, a great deal changed,” Brown says.

The two primary advances that helped energize Oklahoma’s oil and gas industry were advances in horizontal drilling and advances in hydraulic fracturing. While some unfamiliar with the technologies may define these practices as new, neither is.
“Horizontal drilling is not new – it has been used offshore all of the time,” Brown said.

Nor is hydraulic fracturing – or “fracking” – a new technique. As in the case of horizontal drilling, it is simply a technology-based application that has been improved. Experts in the field cite some of the general advances in both technologies. Horizontal drilling, long-used offshore, has seen advances in “navigation” and drill bits, as well as the advance technology of identifying the “course” for the drilling.

In hydraulic fracturing, advances have come in the form of the fluids – mostly water – used in the process, in recycling of that water and in more exact application of the process.

Brown points out that there have also been advances in vertical drilling, which already has the advantage of being less expensive than horizontal drilling.

“Vertical drilling costs about one-third or one-fourth as much as horizontal drilling,” Brown says. “Conventional reservoirs don’t lend themselves to horizontal drilling anyway. Still, there have been new technological advances, such as a PVC bit. Technologies are out there and are always going to be developed.”

It is a combination of advances in these longtime practices and in other technology that has allowed drilling for shale oil – long thought out of reach of traditional practices.
The result has had a lasting impact on the industry, on Oklahoma and in the alleged goal of North American energy independence.

“The result [of the technological advances] is that more wells become commercial,” Brown says. “It’s opened up huge reserves, and especially in Oklahoma.”

New Fields For Newfield

New fields, rejuvenated fields and ongoing exploration are all keys to Oklahoma’s burgeoning role at the heart of the quest for energy independence. But they aren’t the only factors that have helped the state achieve its new, important position.

“Look at the companies headquartered in the state,” Terry says. “You have companies like Devon and Chesapeake among many others that have chosen to locate in, relocate to and seriously invest in Oklahoma. These are the largest companies in the field, and they chose Oklahoma.”

All of Oklahoma’s assets and benefits as an energy state are familiar to Lee K. Boothby, chairman, president and CEO of Newfield Exploration Corp. Newfield is set to celebrate its 25th year in business in December. It was founded in 1988 with an initial tight focus on the shallow waters of the Gulf of Mexico. It grew from being jokingly called “No-field” to being one of the largest operators in the Gulf by 1999.

“Our second decade in business was about diversifying,” says Boothby. “One obvious option at the time was deep water, but it wasn’t something we wanted to do. Instead we wanted to move on shore and predominantly in the U.S. We looked at moving into the mid-continent.”

There was certainly competition from other energy-rich areas of the country. Instead, Newfield opted for Oklahoma when it acquired a private, Tulsa-based company in January 2001.

“We got an initial work force and 60-65 million cubic feet of natural gas production,” Boothby says. “When we looked at Oklahoma what we liked was that while there were longer-lived assets, we also got entry into an area with a rich heritage in the oil and gas industry. The energy industry in Oklahoma is really a story of evolution, of entrepreneurs taking risks – but also of people coming together to solve problems.

“Oklahoma’s influences range outside the actual state borders,” Boothby continues. “There are a lot of Oklahoma natives who live and work in other parts of the world but who are working in the industry. We’re using knowledge gained in Oklahoma all over the United States. There’s a strong production base. As of today, oil has grown each of the last four years – the only time in my career I have seen that. When thinking about that growth rate, you can see the impact, less reliance on foreign oil.”

Of course, it isn’t just oil. Low prices on natural gas might have prompted a number of companies to refocus on crude oil for the time being, but Boothby doesn’t downplay its importance.

“The greatest gift to the nation was the realization that there more than 100 years’ worth of natural gas in the U.S.,” says Boothby. “Now we’re seeing the same types of discovery when it comes to oil. “There is no magic energy bullet. There has to be some kind of bridge and Oklahoma is playing an important role in constructing that bridge to the future.”

Experts cite the impact of Oklahoma’s role in the sector using various parts of the state’s geography as an example.

“You’re really seeing it all over the country where there is drilling going on, and certainly you can see it in places like southeast Oklahoma in the McAlester area,” Brown says. “It used to be that the prison and the ammunition depot were the only large employers there. Things have changed because of oil and gas drilling. The boom in western Oklahoma is something that can affect whole parts of the country.”

If Newfield’s first decade was about building its initial offshore business and its second decade was about diversifying and moving out interests to on-shore, then its third is all about the U.S.

“We’re halfway through our third decade,” Boothby says. “Today we’re moving to focus all corporate energy onshore in the United States. Whatever people think, this has always been a high-tech industry and this [new energy source discoveries] has been driven by quality people and technology.”

Local Support

Among other aspects propelling Oklahoma to the heart of what could be the solution to a major national problem, according to industry insiders, are a legislature that understands the industry and regulators who make sure companies are responsible for their impact but which aren’t oppressive or looking to harm the industry.

“Regulation in Oklahoma is not adversarial,” Brown says. “They want you to drill and do well for Oklahoma, but they want it done right. If you do something wrong, they will sit you down and make you do it right. That’s the way good regulation should work.”

But general factors are important as well, such as Oklahoma’s workforce and its business-friendly environment. Terry points out the polls and studies that continue to rank Oklahoma high on the charts of states in which it is easiest to do business.
Experts also reject the claim that oil and gas interests are holding back the development of alternative energy sources.

“The oil and gas industry doesn’t condemn alternative energy sources,” Brown says. “We have a need for alternative energy sources in the future.”

In the meantime, Brown says oil and gas must be a part of the energy sector.

“It’s economical, and it’s relatively safe,” Brown says. “There’s never even been a demonstrated case of fracking poisoning water in the United States. We’re also improving fracking to minimize the necessary water and to recycle it. The industry is constantly looking to improve.”

The Unconventional Renaissance

But, even given the importance of Oklahoma in the overall oil and gas industry, is sole reliance on North American oil and gas resources a possibility, and if so, what would it require?

Brown, for one, believes it is possible. Furthermore, he says it’s one of OERB’s goals to get that information out to the public.

“OERB wants people to know that there is a light at the end of the tunnel – we can achieve it,” he says. “I feel confident that our reliance on Middle Eastern oil will diminish. As technology continues to advance, it helps everyone. France has just completely outlawed fracking at the same time they rely more on nuclear power than anyone else – and they do a good job at it. Ultimately, we will have to develop more nuclear power, or develop hydrogen systems somehow or some hope cold fusion could be the answer – it works in theory but no one has been able to get it to work in practice.

“Oil and gas are still the next 100 years, but we all need to consider our great-great-great grandchildren, so OERB also promotes conservation,” Brown says.

Terry points out that the U.S. is still 40 percent dependent on overseas oil, and he isn’t sure what the percentage will be in years to come.

“Who knows where it will go from there?” Terry says. “But I think the change will be positive. We are producing more crude oil but still importing it, too. It’s foolish to predict when independence can be achieved. Remember, Oklahoma actually has more natural gas than it does crude oil, even though companies are focused on oil right now. But the prices for natural gas are historically low. You see more and more natural gas being used to produce electricity. CNG is increasing on the demand side. As demand increases prices will go up and we’ll continue to be a leader.”

“Natural gas is plentiful and cleaner burning – I think it has a bright future,” Terry says. “Oklahoma is one of the absolute leaders in the drive to energy independence.”

Brown says that talk of energy independence has been circulated for “a lot of years.”

“Until this unconventional renaissance, most people thought it was a pipe dream,” he says. “For the first time in my life, I feel like energy independence is feasible. The biggest risk factors the industry faces aren’t based on the industry or geology. It’s above-ground risk based on misinformation and environmental extremism. Everything we all care about starts with a strong economy.”

Brown points out that the energy sector provided a disproportionate number of new jobs created at times during the global recession – and that’s energy as in oil and natural gas, not windmill manufacturing or the construction of solar cells.
“You can see the effects of the [oil and gas industry] in small towns and in Middle America, and obviously it is easy to see here in Oklahoma,” Brown says.

Brown does not feel that many people around the United States, particularly states that do not have experience with the sector, understand the oil and gas industry. He says if more people understood the nature of the industry, its economics, benefits and long-term legacy – as well as its relative safety – there might be less misinformation in the public consciousness.

“I think, at the end of the day, unconventional oil and gas from Oklahoma and in North America will win,” adds Brown. “It has a lot more benefits than cost. There’s a lot the average citizen doesn’t understand.”

To clarify, North American energy independence includes all of North America – the U.S., Canada and Mexico. While many are aware of shale oil being produced and sold in Canada, fewer people might know that Mexico sits on top of resources that haven’t even been identified yet.
Maximizing the potential for North American energy independence is no easy thing, Terry point out.

“It would take a mix of a lot of things to maximize the possibility,” says Terry. “Fortunately, Oklahoma has been in this business a long time. It’s part of a culture and it is an industry that’s welcomed here. If and when independence is achieved, Oklahoma will be in the middle of it.”

That Ah Ha Moment

What happens when you blend the feminine aesthetic of the '40s and '50s with clean, of-the-moment lines of the 21st century? Then you infuse it all with rich colors and a touch of rocker attitude? The result is a fresh look for fall that somehow manages to pull off a drastic shift in trends while knowing exactly from where it came.
 

Photographed on location at the Arts & Humanities Council of Tulsa’s stunning new Hardesty Arts Center in the Brady District, designed by Selser Schaefer Architects. Models courtesy Brink Model Management. Hair by Shawna Burroughs, Jara Herron Medical Spa and Salon. Makeup by Hailey Wheeler, Styles by Hailey Wheeler.

Steely Dan

Wednesday, Sept. 4, 8 p.m.

Apparently, Rikki didn’t lose that number. Steely Dan, the band behind 1970s hits such as “Do It Again” and “Reelin’ in the Years” calls on Tulsa again, this time for its 2013 tour, “Mood Swings: 8 Miles to Pancake Day,” helmed by Donald Fagen and Walter Becker. The core members and creators of Steely Dan’s breezy, jazz-laced rock charisma bring the band to play the Brady Theater, 105 W. Brady St. Show time is at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 4, with doors opening at 7 p.m. Tickets are $79-$99. Get yours at www.bradytheater.com.

61st Cherokee National Holiday

Friday, Aug. 30-Sunday, Sept. 1

When the Cherokee National Holiday was established in 1953, it was foremost a celebration of the signing of the tribe’s 1839 constitution. Today, the Labor Day weekend holiday is also about returning home to Tahlequah for those who left northeastern Oklahoma and reconnecting with family and the Cherokee life. The 61st holiday takes place at the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma capital and is packed with activities –stickball, softball, marbles and golf tournaments; arts and crafts vendor market; juried art show; parade; 5k run, all-Indian rodeo; intertribal powwow; quilt show; cornstalk shooting contest; gospel singing; traditional Indian games; traditional food cook-off; horseshoes competition; a musical play; and fireworks. Go to www.cherokee.org to see all the activities booked for Friday, Aug. 30-Sunday, Sept. 1 as well as locations.

Alexander Kanchick: Jewish Life & Folk Tales

Continuing

The colorful, fanciful and humorous images of Alexander Kanchick: Jewish Life & Folk Tales continue to enchant at the Sherwin Miller Museum of Jewish, 2021 E. 71st St., Tulsa. The paintings and sculpture pieces of the Moldovian-born artist are on exhibit through Nov. 3 depicting scenes of village life in Russia and its folk stories. Don’t be surprised if you see a mummy or two in Kanchick’s work. While you’re there, check out The Exodus: 3,400 Year of the Jewish Diaspora and its look at the migration of Jewish communities throughout history. Admission is $3.50-$6.50. Museum hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday and 1-5 p.m. Sunday. For more, go to www.jewishmuseum.net.

Wayne White: Yer Supposed to Act All Impressed

Thursday, Aug. 29, 7:30 p.m.

We’re guessing that patrons of the Oklahoma City Museum of Art have thoroughly enjoyed having a section of their prestigious art institution transformed (temporarily) into a playhouse for the imagination. OKC loves a rodeo, even one straight out of cubist’s dream. That’s Halo Amok, an enormous puppet installation that lets visitors tug a few ropes to see what happens. If you want to see Wayne White’s exhibit, you have through Oct. 6 to check it out at 415 Couch Drive. If you wish to see the puppet master and artist in action, you’ll get the chance when White stops in at OKCMOA for a live performance. “Yer Supposed to Act All Impressed” happens at 7:30 p.m. at the museum’s Noble Theater. Tickets are $10, but if you’re a museum member, admission is free. White will also visit with audiences at two screenings of “Beauty is Embarrassing,” the whimsical 2012 film documentary about his life, family and work. Screenings are at 5:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 30, and Saturday, Aug. 31. For more, visit www.okcmoa.com.

For more about Halo Amok, read about it here: www.okmag.com/June-2013-1/Halo-Amok-at-OKCMOA/.