Okay. Thanks, Roland. If you look over on Slide 10, this is an updated slide from our last call, which outlines the new development plan we have utilizing the horseshoe lateral concept. The test the concept, we have -- we've successfully drilled and completed our first single horseshoe well, the Sebastian 11 #5. This is located in DeSoto Parish, Louisiana and it's located in one of our isolated single section acreage blocks. We turned the well to sales early last week. We just recently reached an IP rate of 31 million cubic feet a day from a 9,382 foot completed lateral that is in the Haynesville Shale. Building upon this successful test, we will be pursuing additional horseshoe well projects in the future. The technology allows us to develop acreage that before presented more challenging economics by being limited to drilling short laterals. The section we have depicted on this slide represents a project we have scheduled for late next year. This section would have originally been developed by drilling 4,000, 5,000-foot laterals from 2 well pads with a $40 million capital cost. The same section will now be developed from a single 2-well pad drilling 2 horseshoe laterals with a $32 million capital cost. And this is based on the D&C cost of $1,740 a foot, and our recently completed Sebastian well costs came in slightly lower than this. The project will deliver cost savings of 23% or $8 million, which substantially improved all our key economic performance metrics. We expect the well performance from the horseshoe wells will match that of our regular 10,000-foot laterals. And with this success, we have also optimized our drilling inventory by converting 57% of our short Haynesville locations to 64 future horseshoe locations. We're still in the process of evaluating our short Bossier locations for additional horseshoe view locations. On Slide 11 is our current drilling inventory as it stands at the end of the third quarter. Our total operated inventory now stands at 1,607 gross locations. And so 1,252 net locations, which equates to a 78% average working interest. The non-operated inventory now stands at 1,199 of those locations and 158 net locations, which represents a 28% average working interest. The drilling inventory split between Haynesville and Bossier locations broken down into our 4 different categories: bilateral length. The short laterals less than 5,000 foot, the medium laterals up 25,000 and 8,500 foot. Our long laterals come in 8,500 and 10,000 foot and our extra-long laterals that go past 10,000 feet. In our gross operated inventory, we now have 180 short laterals, 331 medium laterals, 482 long laterals and 614 extra-long laterals. And inventory is split evenly basically between the Haynesville and the Bossier. The updated inventory numbers include the impact of identifying 64 horseshoe locations in the Haynesville Shale. 2/3 or 68% of the gross operated inventory as laterals longer than 8,500 feet and 38% of the gross operated inventory have laterals longer than 10,000 feet. The average lateral length now stands at 9,261-foot, and this is up slightly from our 9,077 feet, which we had at the end of the second quarter. This inventory provides us with over 30 years of future drilling locations based on this year's activity. On Slide 12 is the chart outlining our average lateral length drilled based on wells that we turned to sales. During the third quarter, we turned 11 wells to sales with an average length of 12,586. Individual links ranged from 8,912 feet to 15,303 feet. Our record longest laterals will still say is at 15,726 seat. All the wells we turned to sales during the third quarter had laterals longer than 8,500 feet. And furthermore, 9 of the 11 wells that turned to sales during the quarter were extra-long laterals that were over 10,000 feet. As we mentioned earlier, we did not turn to sales any wells on our Western Haynesville acreage during the third quarter. However, we do have 6 additional wells in the Western Haynesville that we plan to turn to sales by the end of the year or early January 2025. The first of these 6 wells was turned to sales last week, and we are -- it's currently being flow-tested. Looking ahead, we have several extra-long laterals slated to turn to sales over the remainder of the year, and we expect our average lateral length for all of 2024 will be approximately 10,100 feet on a total of 48 wells turned to sales. To recap on our long lateral activity to date, we've now drilled 109 wells, collaterals longer than 10,000 feet, and we have drilled 40 wells with laterals over 14,000 feet. Slide 13 outlines our new well activity since we last provided the well results at the end of July. Since our last call, we have 8 new wells that have turned to sales. The individual IP rates on these range from 10 million cubic feet a day up to 31 million cubic feet a day with an average test rate of 21 million cubic feet a day. The average lateral weight was 12,391 feet with the individual laterals that range from 9,382 feet up to 15,272 feet. This list includes our first horse shoe well, the Sebastian 11 #5, turned to sales last week that achieved an IP rate of 31 million cubic feet a day. Recapping our activity levels, we're currently running 5 rigs and 2 frac crews, our second frac crew returned in late September following a 70-day frac holiday during the third quarter. We currently have 2 of the 5 rigs drilling in the Western Haynesville. We also have both of our frac fleets currently working in the Western Haynesville where we're in the process of fracking our first 2-well pads. Most of our pads will be completed in the fourth quarter and turn to sales at year-end. In addition to these 2 well pads, we also have 2 single wells that turn to sales by year-end, which generates the total 6 Western Haynesville wells turning to sales between now and year end. On Slide 14 is the summary of our D&C costs through the third quarter for our benchmark long lateral wells that are located on our core East Texas and North Louisiana acreage. This covers our wells with laterals greater than 8,500 feet long. And during the quarter, all 11 wells that we turned to sales were located on our core East Texas, North Louisiana acreage at all 11 wells fell into our benchmark long-lateral group. We're now providing the drilling cost per foot based on the date the wells reached TD. This provides a better view of the current drilling environment and the growing cost environment and just to be better aligned with the timing of when we -- when the drilling dollars are actually being spent. The completion cost per foot continues to use the turn to sales to date. So in the third quarter, our drilling costs averaged $642 a foot. This is a 3% increase compared to the second quarter. Our third quarter completion costs came in at $776 per foot, which represents a 6% decrease compared to the second quarter. When we kind of look out ahead to the next couple of quarters, we do see our D&C cost remaining flat to going slightly lower. I'll now turn the call back over to Jay to summarize the 2024 outlook.