I was checking through someone's mapcheck (before it goes out to the surveyor of record). I saw a surveyor narrative and got all excited to actually see one.
Upon reading it, a thought occurred to me that perhaps the reason we don't see very many are literacy challenges among surveyors.
English literacy in surveying?
- hellsangle
- Posts: 687
- Joined: Tue Mar 06, 2007 8:31 am
- Location: Sonoma, CA
- Contact:
Re: English literacy in surveying?
As ya'll can agree . . . I ain't the sharpest knife in the drawer . . . but when it comes to 'spaining a difficult boundary - a narrative is the only way to go. It helps not only guide the reviewer, but reminds the author what the hell he/she did to come to such a conclusion . . . especially years into the future when the author can't remember a thing about the survey.
Bat-Sh-crazy Phil again
Bat-Sh-crazy Phil again
-
CBarrett
- Posts: 766
- Joined: Thu Dec 16, 2021 12:55 pm
Re: English literacy in surveying?
Wha the heck, we actually agreed on something!hellsangle wrote: Thu May 16, 2024 4:36 pm As ya'll can agree . . . I ain't the sharpest knife in the drawer . . . but when it comes to 'spaining a difficult boundary - a narrative is the only way to go. It helps not only guide the reviewer, but reminds the author what the hell he/she did to come to such a conclusion . . . especially years into the future when the author can't remember a thing about the survey.
Bat-Sh-crazy Phil again
*Cheers*