Some members of the Goleta, California Newcomers Club visited Platform Holly in September, 2003.
Holly is an offshore rig in the Santa Barbara Channel operated by Venoco Oil Company.
The trip was, of course, a combination informational and public-relations activity for Venoco,
and their representative Mike Edwards was a well-informed and very personable guide.

Click on a thumbnail picture below for enlargement and for slide-show buttons.

Back to Personal Pages Index


P9060140.jpg
It all starts at the Venoco separation facility at the beach, near the Sandpiper Golf Course and the Bacara Hotel.

P9060142.jpg
They are serious about security here!

P9060143.jpg
Really serious!

P9060145.jpg
Got the message?!

P9060148.jpg
Still lurking about...

P9060149.jpg
More warnings!

P9060150.jpg
The hardhats were arrayed on the table with care; safety first.

P9060151.jpg
A view of the Pacific from the Venoco office.

P9060152.jpg
The tour group begins to gather. Venoco's Mike Edwards, Goleta Newcomers' President Chickie Long, and Christine LeBon arrive...

P9060153.jpg
...and everybody signs in.

P9060155.jpg
Linda Graham, Jean Weeks and Mary Anderson begin to suit up for the tour.

P9060156.jpg
-----, Judy Purcell and Chickie listen to the safety briefing.

P9060157.jpg
Mike Edwards helps Steven Weeks with the jumpsuit.

P9060159.jpg
Mike gives us all the word on safe transfer from the boat to offshore Platform Holly, in the Santa Barbara Channel.

P9060162.jpg
More no-kidding security at the entrance to the Venoco pier.

P9060168.jpg
At the pier, Mike Edwards continues his educational program. Here is a drilling bit -- the smaller size one used far underground.

P9060169.jpg
Again, we sign in for the boat trip out to the platform.

P9060172.jpg
Mike shows us the technique for the rope-swing from the boat to the platform.

P9060176.jpg
We walk to the end of the pier to meet the boat.

P9060178.jpg
Mike gives us a little geology lesson on the upturned oil-bearing formations visible along the coast.

P9060183.jpg
At the end of the pier, we'll pick up life preservers...

P9060184.jpg
...take a first look at our transportation...

P9060186.jpg
...take a good look back toward shore...

P9060187.jpg
...and view the pier again.

P9060188.jpg
Here's the Bacara from the ocean side...

P9060189.jpg
...and our intrepid team, ready to embark.

P9060191.jpg
Our boat maneuvers toward the pier...

P9060192.jpg
...and we get a look at "the ropes". Very calm water today; we could imagine what this might be like in a rough sea!

P9060193.jpg
Here's our captain, checking his visitors -- landlubbers?

P9060195.jpg
Our destination is in sight on the horizon -- Platform Holly.

P9060197.jpg
We're underway!

P9060203.jpg
A look back at the Bacara Hotel fro the ocean side.

P9060202.jpg
We visit "bird island", an abandoned oil platform now home to cormorants, pelicans, and the like.

P9060209.jpg
As we get closer, ...

P9060211.jpg
...the pelicans are the first to bail...

P9060212.jpg
...followed by some cormorants. The group waddled over to the edge, reminding some of us of pictures of lemmings heading for the sea.

P9060216.jpg
Holly looms a little closer, and our pelican guide precedes us.

P9060219.jpg
During the trip, Venoco's Mike Edwards explained the natural oil and gas seeps in the Channel, along with some of his striking pictures of gas bubbles bursting upon reaching the surface. The one in the lower picture is about a foot across.

P9060220.jpg
Mike explains the geology of oil exploration and extraction.

P9060223.jpg
There are some of the seeps, near a mooring point for a tanker barge which transports oil once extracted.

P9060225.jpg
In places, the escaping gas makees the ocean look effervescent. 

P9060238.jpg
Huge "tents" placed over active seeps catch about 500,000 cubic feet of gas per day which is then dried on shore and sold through the local gas company.

P9060227.jpg
These tanks on shore store platform-extracted oil until a barge can take it to refineries further down the coast. This area is near the spot where a Japanese submarine shelled the U.S. coast during WWII.

P9060229.jpg
The West Coast, from the Pacific Ocean...

P9060230.jpg
...and Platform Holly, further out.

P9060245.jpg
On approach to Holly, the rig's size becomes more obvious.

P9060248.jpg
...and even more obvious!

P9060249.jpg
It's also a decent resting-spot in the sun for a tired visitor.

P9060250.jpg
The rope-swing from the boat to the platform was easy today -- very smooth water.

P9060257.jpg
We didn't use these ropes -- already occupied!

P9060259.jpg
Our boat stands by for the return trip.

P9060263.jpg
No pictures are allowed on the rig, because camera flashes set off fire alarms...but trust me -- there were some unique views and experiences! A lot of hard work goes on here. 

P9060264.jpg
We lost one hard hat during reboarding, and spent a while recovering it from the water. Can't have that sort of thing washing up on the beach...bad publicity!

P9060266.jpg
Those vertical pipes are the individual wells drilled from this platform - some 30 wells as I remember it . A very involved process of drilling holes of ever-decreasing size to a mile or two from the platform and with directional control.

P9060267.jpg
The flare stack to the left was added after some incidents resulting in release of hydrogen sulfide gas on shore. Now such releases are burned by the flare before they can affect people.

P9060269.jpg
The entire drill tower is moved around on the platform to rest over the pipe containing the well being drilled. Big, heavy machinery there.

P9060272.jpg
After visiting the platform, a trip through the most active of the seeps (and impressive views of dolphin and other fish).

P9060274.jpg
Holly and the coastline.

P9060275.jpg
We're on the trail of some dolphins.

P9060277.jpg
Found 'em -- very hard to get the camera to click just at the right time!

Web page and images generated by Robert Lilley, using
SuperJPG
10/19/2003 23:04