Sequential hydrodynamic response—or slug tests in a well during well development—provide an easy method for objective measurement of well development and comparison of the various development techniques that may be employed. Slug-test equipment developed in Saskatchewan permits precise continuous recording of changing water levels for all times except the first few seconds after the introduction of the slug into the well. Three examples of slug-test analysis indicate jetting and air development to be the most successful techniques for well development in a sand aquifer in southeastern Saskatchewan; mechanical surging, on the other hand, actually reversed the development process in the aquifer. The substitution of a bentonite mud for clear water in drilling out the completion zone in one well proved to be highly undesirable because considerably more effort and time were required to develop this well.