dodge man
Super Star Member
It seems like I see some good threads on surveying matters every few weeks on TBN. I am a land surveyor and I thought I would share my take on what a land owners responsibility is in maintaining your boundaries.
I titled this thread, "beating your bounds" and its my understanding this dates back to old English history where the father would go around his boundaries, grab his son by the ankles, hold him upside down and bounce his head up and down on his boundary corners. I doubt this is what actually happened, but the point is they made it a habit of go around there boundaries yearly and maintaining their corners. I don't think I can stress the importance of this, even if you have had your property surveyed. Its important to know where your corners are and maintain them so you can find them.
Another questions people have, should I get my property surveyed? This varies from region to region. Some areas, every time property gets bought and sold, it gets surveyed. This goes for houses in town or rural areas. It is my experience that this in not usually the case. In my area most of the time property gets bought and sold, its DOES NOT get surveyed. As a surveyor, I find this shocking. This is usually a persons most expensive investment, and with the price of farm ground going for over $11,000 acre, it seems like a good idea to get it surveyed. Its often expensive to get land surveyed. I tell people its a viscous cycle, for every property corner I set, one gets knocked out somewhere else. In other words, I'm not really making any headway.
Another reason I say get your property surveyed, is I see all the horror stories. Houses built over the property line, boundary disputes ending up in court, hard feelings between neighbors.
Please don't take this thread as a promotional ad for my line of work, its more advice to maintain your boundaries and to spot problems early. Its also meant to inform people that when you buy a house or a piece of property, to take a look at the boundaries and ask if its been surveyed. Do this before you buy, not after. If you didn't get your property surveyed before you bought it, don't worry about it, most people in your area probably don't.
I titled this thread, "beating your bounds" and its my understanding this dates back to old English history where the father would go around his boundaries, grab his son by the ankles, hold him upside down and bounce his head up and down on his boundary corners. I doubt this is what actually happened, but the point is they made it a habit of go around there boundaries yearly and maintaining their corners. I don't think I can stress the importance of this, even if you have had your property surveyed. Its important to know where your corners are and maintain them so you can find them.
Another questions people have, should I get my property surveyed? This varies from region to region. Some areas, every time property gets bought and sold, it gets surveyed. This goes for houses in town or rural areas. It is my experience that this in not usually the case. In my area most of the time property gets bought and sold, its DOES NOT get surveyed. As a surveyor, I find this shocking. This is usually a persons most expensive investment, and with the price of farm ground going for over $11,000 acre, it seems like a good idea to get it surveyed. Its often expensive to get land surveyed. I tell people its a viscous cycle, for every property corner I set, one gets knocked out somewhere else. In other words, I'm not really making any headway.
Another reason I say get your property surveyed, is I see all the horror stories. Houses built over the property line, boundary disputes ending up in court, hard feelings between neighbors.
Please don't take this thread as a promotional ad for my line of work, its more advice to maintain your boundaries and to spot problems early. Its also meant to inform people that when you buy a house or a piece of property, to take a look at the boundaries and ask if its been surveyed. Do this before you buy, not after. If you didn't get your property surveyed before you bought it, don't worry about it, most people in your area probably don't.