Last seen: April 5, 2026 8:04 pm
In Louisiana, the property owners bounding lakes are not entitled to reliction or accretion. The ordinary high water mark of 1812 delineates the boun...
eapls2708, post: 434426, member: 589 wrote: You made good points to consider here that bring up new questions.For this particular lake, what is the ty...
My thoughts are that if the GLO map mapped conditions that are substantially different to the extent that the patent did not reasonably match what the...
All the GLO surveyors did not meander the lake in same part of the lake. Lake is so big that it occupied parts of 6 townships. The meanders lined up...
In the particular state, there is no right to reliction or accretion in the lake.
Sorry, the John Doe here is the great grandbaby of Big John.
Very interesting. When a good tape is properly calibrated and adjusted for temperature, and on fairly flat ground, the biggest error becomes the pers...
Maybe they don't plan to pay you.
I, as a young surveyor, with my license for about 3 months (circa 1981), was asked to survey a tract that was one acre in the southeast quarter of the...
warren ward PLS CO OK, post: 433089, member: 12536 wrote: The reason we have a PLSS, since 1785, and a BLM Manual, is to establish property lines for ...
StLSurveyor, post: 433190, member: 7070 wrote: I have had the same problem on our R8 receivers. The radios used to work fine, than suddenly they stopp...
There is no stopping this. It is innovative, interesting, can be productive, and it can give terribly inaccurate results, when used improperly and no...
Daniel Ralph got it right--potentially a combustible situation. I think you might consider letting your client know the cost of combustion before she...
And with Dave, who is a programming genius. And that is an understatement.
Robert Hill, post: 427845, member: 378 wrote: Lot of conjecture here.But I don't see how a straightforward elevation certificate on a typical residenc...