mjw357
Platinum Member
Could just be a "paper survey', where they just draw up the boundary of the parent tract and create the smaller lots inside it. Flagging and wooden stakes placed roughly as best guess. May or may not be legal in your state/county.I have a question or two for the surveyors.
Background: (1.) I am looking at properties (10-50 acres) in Western Washington state. Some of them are heavily forested with basically overgrown Christmas trees (approx. 20 - 40 years old). There is no way in the world a surveyor can use a transit to shoot through the trees and brush. I am not sure GPS can get a clear view of the sky. The property owners that are selling these type of properties have typically "had them surveyed" but all I see are orange plastic flags hanging on the tree brances and/or on wooden stakes in the ground.
See above. These stakes may also be just marking the rough proposed location for the lot. The idea being, get buyers for the lots first, get some down payments, then use that money to get a proper survey or plat done.edlegault said:(2.) I am also looking at some properties that have been mostly clear cut (pretty much nice and open ground). These I can understand the surveyor could have had an easy time surveying the 10-40 acre "lots". But again all I see is orange flags tied to wooden stakes or tree branches supposedly marking the corners.
In Ohio, has to be 1/2" diameter X 30" steel rod (minimum) with some sort of ID cap, or other permanent monument. Again, laws may differ in your state.edlegault said:So, I understand there should be metal pins in the ground at the corners corresponding to the recorded legal description. Is that a standard? How are they found in the ground? Metal detector? What if a metal detector finds a piece of other buried junk instead of the "pin"? Is the "pin" just a piece of rebar or is something special with a surveyor's mark on it?
Nothing keeps them from moving. And it takes lots and lots of setups, cutting and time to do a survey in thick brush.edlegault said:-- What keeps someone from moving the orange flags attached to the wooden stakes? And how does a good survey happen when the forest and brush is so thick that you cannot hardly walk through it, never-the-less look or sight a transit through it?