Coffee with the County - Squared Away
A few years ago, my husband and I moved into one of the biggest projects of our lives–a stick-built homestead that we get to call home. Truthfully, we both learned a lot in the process. I am so fortunate to have a husband who can do just about anything–he rigged the house up with electrical lines and most of the plumbing. He learned how to hang and finish drywall with the help of his skilled father, and he can hang siding like a pro. He’s a self-taught do-it-all man who married a self-taught hire-it-out woman. (Insert chuckling here.)
All kidding aside, I can typically figure out a problem on my own, but I am not usually the one who rolls up my sleeves to build something. It’s never been my strong suit. I can throw a hammer just like anyone else, but more than likely, I’ll hit my thumb (which I’ve done many times in this life). My husband was so patient with me during our home-building project, because he had to teach me about all of the terms, processes, and structures. I cast the vision for our dream home, and he built it. (And really, that’s what makes us so great together!)
One piece I learned about was the process of surveying. I was–if I may admit–quite naive when it came to all that had to happen for a house to be built: the permitting, the blueprints, and those three-legged surveying instruments that I only understood to be Hollywood-like cameras on the side of a road or property. Little did I know, that part of the process was vital to our purchasing land and building a new home.
In 2020, we met Scott Zeigler, owner and lead surveyor of Hand to the Plow Surveying. I remember thinking, “Wow, that business name seems awfully fitting for our new neighborhood.” We’re blessed to have a neighborhood full of hardworking, generous families within the Amish community, and we often see the hands to the plows–literally! Scott was much like our neighbors, and was very kind and helpful in our project. He got us all squared away (literally and figuratively), and helped us establish the boundaries which we’d call ours.
I’ve gotten to know Scott over the past few years as one of our Chamber members, and one of the few active (and very busy, I might add!) surveyors in our area. He has been particularly active in our Field of Dreams Career Expo, and has been one of the frontrunners in speaking with teenagers about local career pathways here in our communities. Even more so, he shares with students about the high demand for professionals like him in the surveying field, and that is a sentiment that I hear from others within the construction industry.
The National Society of Professional Surveyors (NSPS) designates a National Surveyors Week to commemorate the work and public service that surveyors provide day-in and day-out. March 16, National Surveyors Day, starts the commemoration this year, which runs through the 22nd. Even larger, March 21 celebrates Global Surveyors Day.
Why the commemoration? Surveyors provide a service that is significant to the success and sustainability of both public and private projects. They measure and map out land for development, construction, and other purposes. Bridges, roads, residential to industrial construction, and even underwater infrastructure require the help of surveyors, and “geospatial experts” leverage innovative technology and strategies to produce the safest, strongest, and best solutions in all of these areas.
In honor of Scott and others like him this National Surveyors Week, allow me to share a few unique facts and statistics about the surveying profession:
- Today, there are about 90,000 professional licensed land surveyors that work around the world (gonzalez-strength.com).
- George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson were all land surveyors before they took office as the President of the United States (mooreengineering.com).
- The Mason-Dixon Line is actually a survey line. “Charles Mason, an assistant astronomer at Greenwich Observatory, and Jeremiah Dixon, an astronomer, mathematician, and surveyor, were hired to survey an agreed-upon line to settle a dispute between Pennsylvania and Maryland. It took 4 years and cost $75,000 to run the 233 mile line. Modern surveys have shown it to be an accurate survey, within a couple of seconds of latitude” (mooreengineering.com).
- Surveying is one of the oldest professions, dating back to 3,000 B.C. in which The Egyptian Land Register was created, which shows various land owners and locations of land (mooreengineering.com).
While we may not require the help of surveyors on a daily basis, this commemoration allows us the opportunity to appreciate their work from afar. The truth is, our world wouldn’t be quite as measured, square, or calculated if it weren’t for surveyors, and in today’s world, the surveying workforce is short-handed. Thank you, surveyors, for your daily hard work to make LaGrange County what it is!
Did you know?
- In the world of construction and advancement, LaGrange County approved an updated Unified Development Ordinance last year. The 313-page document provides regulatory guidance for land, structures, and more, which touch the lives and work of residents, businesses, and more. To see the final document, visit the Document Center at www.lagrangecounty.org.
- Want to get on the books at Hand to Plow Surveying? Give Scott and his team a call at (260) 593-0693.