This was good information. My father knew where the property lines were, but when he gifted the land to me, I did not know. I had a survey done. The lines were exactly where he said they were. I was amazed. He left me a great inheritance.
I did a stint as a property surveyor for about 4 years. Some of the most common rural property markers we found were car or truck axles driven in the ground and RR spikes driven into trees. Our most used tool was our metal detector. Interestingly when we found RR spikes in trees, the longer it had been there, the higher in the tree it was found. RR spikes were also commonly driven into roadbeds eight in the middle of the road. Good vid!
We got a 8 acre bonus on the previous property we bought. It was advertised as 17 acres. The latest survey was in 1904 so we paid to have it surveyed. The parcel ended up being 25 acres.
I mark boundary lines as a side job sometimes. These are great clues. Often, corners are marked with mill stones and or metal posts in an 3 post arrangement.
Great information Troy, I bought 20 acres in the late 70s it had the barb wire in the trees, when I went to the courthouse to look up and trace the deeds I went back to an 1840 deed that mentioned a Walnut tree on the corner of the property next to the road. In 1978 the tree stump was still their.
Property surveys are not expensive, depending on acreage. Pay to have it professionally surveyed. It provides great peace of mind and a legal basis. The information provided here may give you an indication of the property lines but not even close to knowing precisely where the line is.
Modern surveys can cause many issues. We lost land on two sides and gained on two sides. All the property is pastureland and the lines have been marked by fences for 100+ years. Lines are established by adverse possession. If you have pastureland, satellite maps can give you an idea of where property lines "should" be. We can see section lines marked by trees on fencing that extends for miles in all directions.
Property lines that are claimed by adverse possession only change if it so ordered by a court of appropriate jurisdiction. Adverse possession is a complex matter and requires proof.
I just mark it out on Google Maps, save it, and download it to a Garmin GPS. Then you can walk to within feet of the boundaries and start looking for the corners.
When the County resurfaced our road they moved the marker in the road 8' to the east * now the property we purchased all shifted 8' * problem our driveway is not on our property now but was then * why would they move the marker in the road after years & years of being 8' to the west? Where do I get this resolved?
A tax map is not worth a crap, the property line trees are called Monument tree's both land owners own that tree. Troy my deed and survey is back in 1884 was measured in poles 1 pole = 16 1/2 feet and one rule of thumb is Monuments over measurement it dont matter if its 2 feet or 500 feet Monument is over measurement great Video Troy !!! the funny thing is the Survey guy got payed $12 for the whole job of 148 Acres back in 1884
My property in Spokane had a "bearing marker" on a tree. That makes surveying a snap! Bearing markers are scattered about, all over America, and surrounding land (not sure how far each way) is described based on that marker... The tree was old, dead and just a nasty snag, but it could not be removed without permission and an official person on hand. I notice on google maps they have since cut the top part of the tree off, leaving just the chest high stump w/bearing tag. I screen shot it, and may post it to your FB though you can't read the tag..... I wish I'd have taken a pic of it way back then.
If you are in one of the rectangular states you should get the original field notes for the tract you are trying to find. I am talking about the notes the original surveyor made back in the 19 century. They will tell you what was set at the original corners and how the witness trees and line mark trees are marked. Plus it will give you the true dimensions of your original section.
Most states outside of the 13 original colonies were divided using the Public Land Survey System (PLSS). The original notes are available from various governmental agencies. Interesting fact, even if the corner is set in the wrong place, it’s still the corner. 🤔
Thank you for the good advice. I just bought 23 acres in Connecticut, and I’m interested to know in more detail where my borders are. One border is a stream, and there are a couple of dry stack stone walls that are not borders. Interesting.
I used a tax map or platt for the coordinates (available from the county courthouse) and use a gps program on my cell phone. I marked every pin on my 57 acre wooded property with a iron pipe driven in the ground and leave 2 ft above ground and painted the pipes yellow then wrap 3 colors of survey tape on the pipes. then I choose a large tree near the pin and wrap surveyors tape on the tree or mark the tree with a piece of aluminum roof flashing.
Good advice about tax maps. For the property we just purchased, on the tax map website it says “there is no geometry available for this parcel”. It doesn’t appear that any of the bordering properties have a survey on file either.
@@RedToolHouse oh we are getting a survey but they are really backed up with the boom in property sales. It has a lot of fenced pasture in place but that doesn’t seem to be the boundary.
Trees were common property corners in old surveys. If the tree is not there and there is no stump or evidence then you'll have to pay a licensed surveyor to research, look for, and ultimately reset the property corner with a rod.
wh'at we are trying th'is saturday is a small contractor with gps to try to biuld us somekind of trail for a fence line atv tractor trail..on th'e back side of our mountain...the counties plot tax map is way off 'all the markers are 'gone''''other words we dont no were th'e property line is on our back side of th'e property...hope that this gps giuded trail will save us a survay..we do no two sides of property..but the mountain has its ways of reclaiming man made objects overtime.
This was good information. My father knew where the property lines were, but when he gifted the land to me, I did not know. I had a survey done. The lines were exactly where he said they were. I was amazed. He left me a great inheritance.
I did a stint as a property surveyor for about 4 years. Some of the most common rural property markers we found were car or truck axles driven in the ground and RR spikes driven into trees. Our most used tool was our metal detector. Interestingly when we found RR spikes in trees, the longer it had been there, the higher in the tree it was found. RR spikes were also commonly driven into roadbeds eight in the middle of the road. Good vid!
Thank you for sharing this information. I did not know this.
We got a 8 acre bonus on the previous property we bought. It was advertised as 17 acres. The latest survey was in 1904 so we paid to have it surveyed. The parcel ended up being 25 acres.
That is why so many deeds say " x acres, more or less."
don't tell the tax man
Hopefully you just kept it to yourself so you can keep paying taxes for 17 acres😂
@@killacam876 We sold it as 25 acres in 2019 so the new owners get to address that. :)
@@hilltopmachineworks2131 you little sneak, I'm Tim from the IRS, send me $10,000 in Google Play cards or I'll put a CIA arrest warrant out for you!
This is very informative! Great for new rural land owners, and seeing how droves of people are buying away from cities, very valuable
I mark boundary lines as a side job sometimes. These are great clues. Often, corners are marked with mill stones and or metal posts in an 3 post arrangement.
Those pointers you gave are spot on. Been waking WV hills for forty years. It’s an open book, if one knows the language. ✌🏽
Great information Troy, I bought 20 acres in the late 70s it had the barb wire in the trees, when I went to the courthouse to look up and trace the deeds I went back to an 1840 deed that mentioned a Walnut tree on the corner of the property next to the road. In 1978 the tree stump was still their.
They don't make walnuts like that anymore :)
They don't make walnuts like that anymore :)
Interesting observations on ways property was marked.
You shared some very helpful tips Troy. Thanks buddy.
Thank you for your uploads, great source of information.
Great topic. Thanks again!
Another great, practical video from our Master Educator. Very nice job. Thank you from a long time subscriber in north Idaho.
Awesome, thank you!
Property surveys are not expensive, depending on acreage. Pay to have it professionally surveyed. It provides great peace of mind and a legal basis. The information provided here may give you an indication of the property lines but not even close to knowing precisely where the line is.
Good morning this was some nice work. Getting the an like this.
Great video and thanks for sharing
Thanks really interesting. Also thought you would mention Tree Blaze system used long ago.
All good points! I just bought some property close to you guys and have used several of these technics recently. Thanks Troy!
Modern surveys can cause many issues. We lost land on two sides and gained on two sides. All the property is pastureland and the lines have been marked by fences for 100+ years. Lines are established by adverse possession.
If you have pastureland, satellite maps can give you an idea of where property lines "should" be. We can see section lines marked by trees on fencing that extends for miles in all directions.
Property lines that are claimed by adverse possession only change if it so ordered by a court of appropriate jurisdiction. Adverse possession is a complex matter and requires proof.
I just mark it out on Google Maps, save it, and download it to a Garmin GPS. Then you can walk to within feet of the boundaries and start looking for the corners.
There's no cell service in many rural areas. ☹️
@@Dan-oz4qb -- you don't need cell phone service for GPS.
When the County resurfaced our road they moved the marker in the road 8' to the east * now the property we purchased all shifted 8' * problem our driveway is not on our property now but was then * why would they move the marker in the road after years & years of being 8' to the west? Where do I get this resolved?
A tax map is not worth a crap, the property line trees are called Monument tree's both land owners own that tree. Troy my deed and survey is back in 1884 was measured in poles 1 pole = 16 1/2 feet and one rule of thumb is Monuments over measurement it dont matter if its 2 feet or 500 feet Monument is over measurement great Video Troy !!! the funny thing is the Survey guy got payed $12 for the whole job of 148 Acres back in 1884
My property in Spokane had a "bearing marker" on a tree. That makes surveying a snap!
Bearing markers are scattered about, all over America, and surrounding land (not sure how far each way) is described based on that marker...
The tree was old, dead and just a nasty snag, but it could not be removed without permission and an official person on hand. I notice on google maps they have since cut the top part of the tree off, leaving just the chest high stump w/bearing tag. I screen shot it, and may post it to your FB though you can't read the tag..... I wish I'd have taken a pic of it way back then.
There are some geological memorials in WV, but I have never seen a ‘bearing marker’.
If you are in one of the rectangular states you should get the original field notes for the tract you are trying to find. I am talking about the notes the original surveyor made back in the 19 century. They will tell you what was set at the original corners and how the witness trees and line mark trees are marked. Plus it will give you the true dimensions of your original section.
Most states outside of the 13 original colonies were divided using the Public Land Survey System (PLSS). The original notes are available from various governmental agencies. Interesting fact, even if the corner is set in the wrong place, it’s still the corner. 🤔
Thank you for the good advice. I just bought 23 acres in Connecticut, and I’m interested to know in more detail where my borders are. One border is a stream, and there are a couple of dry stack stone walls that are not borders. Interesting.
I used a tax map or platt for the coordinates (available from the county courthouse) and use a gps program on my cell phone. I marked every pin on my 57 acre wooded property with a iron pipe driven in the ground and leave 2 ft above ground and painted the pipes yellow then wrap 3 colors of survey tape on the pipes. then I choose a large tree near the pin and wrap surveyors tape on the tree or mark the tree with a piece of aluminum roof flashing.
T-post with 2” white PVC slipped over it is visible and very long life
i'm from grafton wv
you got some funny looking dogs
Not sure how close the nearest spring is to that last spot. But my guess would have been a moonhine still site.
The lesson here is.. make sure you're getting boarders when you buy a property.
@RedToolHouse, they’re already out of stock! :(
Good advice about tax maps. For the property we just purchased, on the tax map website it says “there is no geometry available for this parcel”. It doesn’t appear that any of the bordering properties have a survey on file either.
That is going to be a fun one to walk!
@@RedToolHouse oh we are getting a survey but they are really backed up with the boom in property sales. It has a lot of fenced pasture in place but that doesn’t seem to be the boundary.
Any plans for a deer hunt this yr
I have a couple friends hunting. I don't normally hunt (unless you call putting meat in the freezer from the back door hunting)
@@RedToolHouse Yep I become disabled so hunting from a good friends front pourch, Just filling the freezer.
You have no Idea, hire a Licensed Land Surveyor!
I have all kinds of ideas. Not all of them are good, however
I’m confused you talk about trees as a reference marker but trees ben known to come down than what nyou do
Trees were common property corners in old surveys. If the tree is not there and there is no stump or evidence then you'll have to pay a licensed surveyor to research, look for, and ultimately reset the property corner with a rod.
6:14 shows a gps base on a tripod...Is this a hoax?
It is my camera phone with my wireless mic receiver. No gps.
wh'at we are trying th'is saturday is a small contractor with gps to try to biuld us somekind of trail for a fence line atv tractor trail..on th'e back side of our mountain...the counties plot tax map is way off 'all the markers are 'gone''''other words we dont no were th'e property line is on our back side of th'e property...hope that this gps giuded trail will save us a survay..we do no two sides of property..but the mountain has its ways of reclaiming man made objects overtime.
Good luck!
@@RedToolHouse THE GUY DIDNT SHOW UP..LOL
Tree hugger
In the purest sense...
Cool
If you suspect a stone pile or wall has anything to do with your boundary, don’t take stones from it.