While much of the industry’s attention remains focused on the Permian Basin and other major shale plays, drilling activity from smaller independent operators continues to create significant opportunities across North Texas. One example is B.O.L.D. Oil and Gas, LLC, a privately held operator headquartered in Graham, Texas, that has maintained a steady drilling program throughout the Fort Worth Basin region.
Since 2020, B.O.L.D. Oil and Gas has drilled 43 wells, with activity concentrated primarily in Archer, Jack, Young, and Palo Pinto counties. The company’s drilling program demonstrates how independent operators continue to invest in mature producing regions where existing infrastructure, proven geology, and lower development costs support economic returns.
Understanding the Fort Worth Basin
The Fort Worth Basin is one of the most established oil and gas producing regions in Texas. Stretching across North Central Texas, the basin includes numerous conventional and unconventional reservoirs and has been a major contributor to U.S. energy production for decades.
The region gained significant attention during the development of the Barnett Shale, which helped pioneer modern shale gas development. Today, the basin remains active through a combination of:
- Conventional oil development
- Horizontal drilling programs
- Recompletion projects
- Secondary recovery operations
- Production optimization initiatives
Counties such as Archer, Jack, Young, and Palo Pinto continue to attract investment from independent operators that specialize in maximizing value from mature assets.
B.O.L.D. Oil and Gas Drilling Activity Since 2020
B.O.L.D.’s drilling activity has been highly concentrated in the core Fort Worth Basin counties:
County Wells Drilled Archer 17 Jack 13 Young 8 Palo Pinto 3 Jones 1 Victoria 1 Total 43
When grouped by basin, approximately 95% of the company’s drilling activity occurred within the Fort Worth Basin.
Basin Breakdown
| Basin | Wells |
|---|---|
| Fort Worth Basin | 41 |
| Eastern Shelf / Permian Margin | 1 |
| Gulf Coast Basin | 1 |
The data suggests a focused strategy centered on North Texas development rather than expansion into multiple operating regions.
Key Drilling Contractors Supporting Activity
Like many independent operators, B.O.L.D. relies on a relatively small group of drilling contractors.
Wells Drilled by Rig
| Rig | Wells |
|---|---|
| LLP Lindemann 5 | 16 |
| LLP Lindemann 4 | 6 |
| LLP Lindemann 3 | 5 |
| Rockin R 1 | 3 |
| Precision 522 | 1 |
| Spruiell 2 | 1 |
| Not Reported | 11 |
The most active rig has been LLP Lindemann Rig 5, which accounted for 16 wells drilled during the period analyzed.
The most recent drilling activity occurred in May 2026 using LLP Lindemann Rig 5 in Archer County.
What This Means for Oilfield Service Companies
While B.O.L.D. may not be one of the largest operators in Texas, companies like B.O.L.D. represent an important segment of the oilfield services market.
Many service providers focus their sales efforts exclusively on large public operators. However, independent operators often maintain consistent drilling and production programs while offering shorter sales cycles and direct access to decision-makers.
For suppliers of:
- Artificial lift systems
- Drilling fluids
- Directional drilling services
- Production chemicals
- Well servicing and workover rigs
- Compression equipment
- Tank and facility maintenance
- Water management services
- Environmental and regulatory support
operators like B.O.L.D. can provide recurring opportunities throughout the life of a field.
The Sales Intelligence Advantage
Understanding where operators are drilling—and which contractors are supporting those operations—gives sales teams a significant competitive advantage.
Knowing that B.O.L.D.’s activity is concentrated in Archer, Jack, Young, and Palo Pinto counties allows service companies to:
- Prioritize field visits in active areas
- Identify contractor relationships
- Target nearby production operations
- Develop county-specific prospecting campaigns
- Monitor permit and drilling activity for future opportunities
The ability to track drilling trends at the operator level helps sales professionals move beyond generic prospecting and focus on companies actively investing capital in the field.
Bottom Line
B.O.L.D. Oil and Gas illustrates how independent operators continue to drive meaningful drilling activity across the Fort Worth Basin. With 43 wells drilled since 2020 and a concentrated focus on North Texas, the company remains an active participant in one of Texas’ most established producing regions.
For oilfield service companies, these drilling programs create ongoing demand for drilling, completion, production, maintenance, and optimization services. Identifying operators like B.O.L.D. and understanding where they are deploying capital can help sales teams uncover opportunities that might otherwise be overlooked.






