A friend in NYC inherited 25% of 320 acres "somewhere in AZ" and is looking for a surveyor to figure out where and what it is.
Paper research and probably not a ground survey just yet.
Any recommendations?
Thanks.
Not as a solicitation on my part, but AZ is full of surveyors. I happen to be one who is is business for himself. Without knowing the location, I'll just suggest you provide more information. I'm in NW AZ, but go anywhere. If not, I know who to refer their way - it's all about networking, right leggers.
I don't deal with brokers, so if this isn't real save the call.
Wayne Griffin
[email protected]
weighted mean, post: 345975, member: 9599 wrote: A friend in NYC inherited 25% of 320 acres "somewhere in AZ" and is looking for a surveyor to figure out where and what it is.
Paper research and probably not a ground survey just yet.Any recommendations?
Thanks.
If he's looking for free information; tell him not to be surprised if he gets what he paid for....
weighted mean, post: 345975, member: 9599 wrote: A friend in NYC inherited 25% of 320 acres "somewhere in AZ" and is looking for a surveyor to figure out where and what it is.
Paper research and probably not a ground survey just yet.Any recommendations?
Thanks.
Contact the County Surveyor's office (if you even know what county it's in..?) and ask for a list of surveyors working in the County.
Sometimes the County Surveyor's Office will even do a little public record research for you.
Chip on your shoulder bro?
sent my friend Wayne Griffin's email address.
back to lurking.
Wayne G. wins; back to lurking.
weighted mean, post: 346062, member: 9599 wrote: Wayne G. wins; back to lurking.
Well weight man, thanks for the kudo. I will sincerely say that I have done many many surveys for out of state folks who gained property either via inheritance, back taxes, or craigs list... that had no idea what they bought. 10 acres for $10 or $40K. Not bad on the surface, but good luck getting there without either a helicopter, a back up helicopter. I know the sneaky way in via washes, mega trespassing (sorry BLM), but at the end of the day it often is a big old fashioned....huh... what were they were thinking when they "bought" it.
For some reason you just reminded me of the one-inch square tracts in Alaska that a breakfast cereal company was passing out about 55 years ago.
There is a subdivision on steep hillside on the north side of I-80 between Donner Pass and Truckee. The lots were reportedly given to patrons of a movie theater in San Francisco in the 1920s. They still change hands and the buyer wants to know where their lot is located.
At my previous job a coworker inherited a 5 acre aliquot in the middle of the Southern California desert. He asked me to find it on the map which I did, 5 acres of sand miles from the nearest road with no water LOL.